Casting a cold eye on postwar Japan, the raw, grainy and impressionistic photography of Shomei Tomatsu practically defined Japanese photography in the second half of the 20th century, greatly influencing Daido Moriyama, Nobuyoshi Araki and Takuma Nakihara. His best-known images are his portraits of people and street scenes from the 1950s, when the country struggled to recover from World War II and US military presence was ubiquitous; his photographs of 1960s Japan; and throughout his career, his images of Okinawa, where he died in 2012. Tomatsu's most famous single photograph is probably Melted Bottle, Nagasaki, 1961, which depicts a beer bottle rendered grotesquely biomorphic by the nuclear blast that devastated Nagasaki on August 9, 1945. The American photographer and writer Leo Rubinfien described Tomatsu's Nagasaki images as 'sad, haggard facts,' noting that 'beneath the surface there was a grief so great that any overt expression of sympathy would have been an insult.'

This book, which accompanies a major retrospective at MAPFRE in Barcelona, elucidates the rich visual universe of Tomatsu, including his best-known images and previously unpublished work. It is the first comprehensive survey to be published since his death.

Casting a cold eye on postwar Japan, the raw, grainy and impressionistic photography of Shomei Tomatsu practically defined Japanese photography in the second half of the 20th century, greatly influencing Daido Moriyama, Nobuyoshi Araki and Takuma Nakihara. His best-known images are his portraits of people and street scenes from the 1950s, when the country struggled to recover from World War II and US military presence was ubiquitous; his photographs of 1960s Japan; and throughout his career, his images of Okinawa, where he died in 2012. Tomatsu's most famous single photograph is probably Melted Bottle, Nagasaki, 1961, which depicts a beer bottle rendered grotesquely biomorphic by the nuclear blast that devastated Nagasaki on August 9, 1945. The American photographer and writer Leo Rubinfien described Tomatsu's Nagasaki images as 'sad, haggard facts,' noting that 'beneath the surface there was a grief so great that any overt expression of sympathy would have been an insult.'

This book, which accompanies a major retrospective at MAPFRE in Barcelona, elucidates the rich visual universe of Tomatsu, including his best-known images and previously unpublished work. It is the first comprehensive survey to be published since his death.

Liczba książek
1
Temat
Sztuka
Tytuł książki
Shomei Tomatsu
Stan
Bardzo dobry
Autor/ Ilustrator
Carlos García and Hiromi Kojima and Juan Vicente Ariaga and Ryuichi Kaneko
Rok wydania najstarszego przedmiotu
2018
Edycja
Pierwsze wydanie
Język
Angielski
Oryginalny język
Tak
Wydawca
Fundación Mapfre
Oprawa
Twarda oprawa
Liczba stron
172

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Liczba komentarzy: 3063 (774 w ciągu ostatnich 12 miesięcy)
  1. 767
  2. 5
  3. 2

Comanda a ajuns la destinație! Excelent ambalată! Thank you!

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user-1a06e6ccb191