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photographers' gallery press no. 10
¥2,520
This isuue features Georges Didi-Huberman, a French philosopher and art historian, who has attracted remarkable attention for his books on images in recent years. He deploys his thoughts on images across a variety of disciplines such as photography, paintings, movies, etc. And it is full of discoveries on images. What does it brought him to write more than 20 single author books? We visited him in Paris to look for the answer and interview with him. |
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photographers' gallery press no. 9
¥2,520
This issue features Michael Fried, an art critic and historian whose work brought a profound influence on many American artists and art critics since 1960s when he presented many writings such as "Art and Objecthood." This issue carries an interview of 40 pages with Fried who presented Why photography Matters as Art as Never Before in the fall of 2008, with a review by Michio HAYASHI that focuses the chapter on Thomas Demand in Fried's book. |
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photographers' gallery press no. 8
¥3,990
This issue features Kenzo TAMOTO, a photographer, who has a strong influence on Japanese Photography on the postwar. He is well known as the first documentary photographer in Japan and the pioneer of Hokkaido Photography (Hokkaido is the second largest island in Japan and is located the northern most.), but all the details of his work have not yet been brought to light.
In 2009 marks the 150th anniversary of the opening of the port of Hakodate, Hokkaido, this issue carries 496 photographs , which tell us how Hokkaido Land Development (in the second half of 18th century) was taken, with remarkable texts. |
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photographers' gallery press no. 7
¥2,520
Geoffrey Batchen, a most now radical historian of photography, who reconsiders the "origin" of photography and challenge making the history of photograhy plural. This issue carries a bilingual interview of 23 pages with Batchen and two his essays translated into Japanese. |
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