Google翻訳
"Mujo" is a collection of works by Nobuyoshi Araki, one of Japan's leading postwar photographers. Japanese photography from the 1960s onward saw the birth of new expressions such as "cinematic photography" and "composite photography," in addition to so-called "record" photographs such as "realism," "journalism," and "documentary." This marked the beginning of a form of photography based on a purely personal, personal line, and particularly assertive forms of photography were even called "personal photographs." In other words, they "portray the self" through the subject. Key figures in this movement were Masahisa Fukase and Nobuyoshi Araki. Since the 1990s, the expression "personal diary" ("Personal Diary") has frequently been used, and several collections with the same title have been published. This book is comprised of previously unpublished works from that time, primarily featuring nudes based on Araki's personal line. It particularly features works with motifs of "bondage" and "married women." Limited to 1,000 copies.