Google翻訳
The March 1982 issue of the photography magazine "The Photographic Age" that swept through the 1980s. In this issue, Nobuyoshi Araki "Landscape", Daido Moriyama "Light and Shadow", Keizo Kitajima "Christmas of Koza", Ikko Kochi "Infrared Photo Success", Hozumi Nakahira "Jazz Giants", etc. However, noteworthy is the special feature "Masahisa Fukase", which includes two illustrations of "Vagrant and Karasu" and a text by Akira Hasegawa entitled "Eyes staring at loneliness". Akira Hasegawa is a well-known photo critic and editor, who was in charge of editing Fukase's Ravens, and Fukase from the Asahi Sonorama photo selection series published in the late 70's. Hasegawa is also in charge of the work "Yoko / Yohko". Fukase's comment by Hasegawa is written in detail, and the inside story at the time of the publication of "Yoko / Yohko" (for example, the broken glass Yoko was an idea of Emperor Shoji Yamagishi) was also spelled out. Is interesting. In addition, at the end of the sentence, we are calling: "I wonder if there is a publisher who wants to put Fukase's "crow" in a photo book. I think we can do something that will not end the photographic boom with emptiness." (And a few years later, it was spotlighted as the first book of Soshasha Michitaka Ota, and its popularity is well known.)