Google翻訳
"Big Goro Special Edition: Sounding Carib" is a photobook by Kishin Shinoyama, one of Japan's leading photographers. Kishin Shinoyama continues to depict the "atmosphere of the times" in a variety of fields to satisfy visual desires, including portraits of women in gravure, idols, and nudes. In the 1970s, he left behind many works that are considered masterpieces in the art photography world, such as "Olere Olala" (1971), "House" (1975), and "Sunny Day" (1975), and in the 1990s, he made his name known to the general public by working on a photobook of Rie Miyazawa, a pioneer of nude photography. This book was published as a special edition of the men's magazine "Goro", which was published from 1974 to 1992, and is a book in which Shinoyama traveled to Caribbean countries such as Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica, and Puerto Rico. Speaking of "Goro", Shinoyama is known for his cover design and the gravure series "Gekisha". As the title suggests, the background music used in the shoot is music with a distinctive Central American rhythm. In Trinidad, the film conveys the excitement of the carnival, in Puerto Rico, it captures sensual women by the water, and in Jamaica, it captures the colorful atmosphere of local towns.