Google翻訳
Spider's Strategy is a photobook by Japanese photographer Osamu Kanemura. After studying experimental film at the Image Forum Film Institute in his 20s, Kanemura Osamu enrolled in Tokyo College of Photography and studied photography under Kiyoshi Suzuki. After that, he continued to take photographs while working part-time as a lecturer at a photography school and as a newspaper delivery man, and in 1996, when he was over 30, he was selected as one of six photographers attracting attention from around the world at a special exhibition at MoMA. The following year, he won the Japan Photographic Society Newcomer's Award and the 13th Higashikawa Prize New Photographer's Award, and in 2000, he became the second youngest person in history to win the 19th Domon Ken Award, making him one of the leading photographers in modern Japan. This book is Kanemura Osamu's masterpiece, published in 2001, the same year as "I can tell." This is an ambitious work by a photographer who wanders through the maze of urban areas, such as spider webs of wires, alleys, and ruins, and approaches the essence of the gapless "modern Japanese urban space" filled with things. While pursuing a unique photographic expression that is neither landscape nor architecture, "Japan" is clearly depicted in the photographs. Text by architect Arata Isozaki. Cover design by art director Yukimasa Okumura. Published in Parr & Badger Vol Ⅱ. Obi missing. (There are scratches on the front page.)