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At any moment in time there are hundreds of thousands of people moving at speeds of tens of thousands of kilometres an hour in the sky above us [read more]

Posted by amelia groom 12:00 AM, October 26th, 2009 1 comment

Picture 7

Fans of the legendary poster designer Tadanori Yokoo should be making the most of cheap flights to Japan this October. [read more]

Posted by amelia groom 1:24 AM, October 22nd, 2009 0 comments

Naoto Fukasawa

A new exhibition has just opened at 21_21 Design Site (a foundation that was established by Issey Mikaye and friends in 2007), showcasing 100 objects by product designer  Naoto Fukasawa, accompanied by images of his work from photographer Tamotsu Fujii [read more]

Posted by amelia groom 7:46 PM, October 21st, 2009 0 comments

quentinmetsys

To be there where I think I am not, to disappear where I think I am, that is what matters.

Like her fellow Japanese self-costuming photographic artists Yasumasa Morimura and Tomoko Sawada,  Kimiko Yoshida’s work shows that art is about transformation and photography, in particular, is a medium of performance. Because her bodily decoration and physiognomy are so motley and elastic she would be beyond recognition in her hundreds of self-portraits, were it not for their uniformly square, front-angle head-and-shoulders format. But then, ‘self-portrait’ isn’t really the right term; these are not images of herself but of costumes; fantasy selves have swallowed her up completely. [read more]

Posted by amelia groom 10:55 PM, August 27th, 2009 0 comments

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Shibakouen Hamutaro’s ongoing documentation of dilapidating theme parts around Japan [read more]

Posted by amelia groom 12:00 AM, August 2nd, 2009 2 comments

naoki hanjo

“Small changes in point of view can lead to big changes in consciousness. I think this is the role of photography and it’s what makes photography interesting.”

Naoki Honjo’s parochial birds-eye landscapes and cityscapes appear at once familiar and removed, simple and disorienting, real and fake. The Tokyo-based photographer ingeniously manipulates lighting, scale, perspective, focus and colour to invoke a sense of small-scale falseness about the environments we live in [read more]

Posted by amelia groom 4:25 PM, June 21st, 2009 0 comments
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