Google翻訳
A photo book by Seike Tomio, one of Japan's leading photographers. Seike Tomio is a world-renowned photographer based in Tokyo and Brighton. After studying at a photography school in Japan and working as a freelancer, he attracted attention with his portrait series of a foreign woman named Zoe, which he worked on in the 1980s. He has held numerous exhibitions at prestigious galleries such as Hamilton's in London and Howard Greenberg in New York, and has released street and landscape works such as "Paris" and "Waterscapes". He is a photographer who is particularly highly regarded overseas among Japanese photographers for his outstanding sense cultivated in Europe, his delicate aesthetic sense and camera work that evokes Japanese culture, and his sharp prints. This book is a collection of works published on the occasion of his first exhibition at Hamilton's Gallery in 1989, and is composed of nude works created in Paris over a period of two years from 1987. It also includes a text that describes the shock and emotion that Andrew Cowan, co-owner of Hamilton's, felt when he first saw Seike's photographs at a gallery in London. Limited to 600 copies. Edition number included. Signed by the photographer .