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"Where Time Has Vanished 1970-1974 (Revised Edition, Second Printing)" is a photo collection by Japan's leading photographer, Ikko Narahara. After graduating from Chuo University's Faculty of Law, he majored in art history at Waseda University's graduate school. He subsequently became devoted to avant-garde art, deepening his connections with numerous artists while paving the way for his career as a photographer. He made a stunning debut with his first exhibition, "Human Land," in 1956, and won the Japan Photo Critics Association Newcomer Award for his work in "Kingdom" in 1958. A photographer of postwar Japan, known internationally and affectionately by his nickname "Ikko," he continues to pursue new possibilities in photographic expression, possessing a sublime aesthetic sense and exceptional camerawork, constantly producing innovative works. This photo collection is comprised of 101 images taken by Narahara during his time in the United States from 1970 to 1974. This book includes "Two Jacqueline Masks," a work that was praised by Diane Arbus herself when the photographer participated in her workshop in 1971, hoping to rethink photography from scratch. This is a revised edition published in 1995 following the first edition in 1975, with 19 new illustrations added. It is in both English and Japanese. Published in 1997, second printing.
Signed by the photographer .