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Oiran
Tetsuji Takechi
Tokyo: Tokyo Academy of Arts, 1983.First edition photobook issued to accompany Takechi Tetsuji’s controversial late-career film Oiran, “A mixture of romance and sex combined with surrealistic horror elements.” The story is loosely based on the work of Jun’ichiro Tanizaki in which a 19th century Japanese prostitute moves to America and her dead lover manifests as a mole on her leg. Takechi was a prominent critic and kabuki director before moving into directing films in the 1960s. His 1964 feature Hakujitsumu is regarded as the first big budget pink film (Japanese movies with nudity or sexual content), and also the first Japanese production subjected to systematic fogging censorship. The following year, Black Snow (1965), led to his arrest on indecency charges, a landmark case he ultimately won, significantly reshaping Japanese film censorship and opening the way for the flourishing of the pink eiga genre through the late 1960s and 1970s. After a decade-long hiatus from cinema, Takechi returned with a more explicit remake of Hakujitsumu before directing Oiran in 1983. The film again brought him into conflict with the censors whom “edited and fogged in 98 different places, altering the film from a near-hardcore opus to a very soft costume drama.” Takechi promoted the film by proclaiming it featured “the first multicoloured penis in Japanese cinema.” The present photobook, issued uncensored, retains many of the film’s erotic stills and remains an important visual record of Takechi’s work. As usual for the period, explicit male nudity is absent. References: WEISSER: The Sex Films: Japanese Cinema Encyclopedia.
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Shigaraki, Potter’s Valley
Louise Allison Cort
Tokyo: Kodansha, 1981. -
To Nippon, the Land of the Rising Sun, by the N. Y. K.
Wilson Le Couteur
Tokyo: Nippon Yusen Kaisha, 1899.Guide Book to Japan, for the Use of Passengers by the Nippon Yusen Kaisha (Japanese Mail Steamship Company), together with a record of a journey from Australia to Japan. This copy with the tipped in slip advising of the managing Agents for Australasia and with the stamp of the Adelaide shipping company McIlwraith, McEacharn & Co.
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Painting the Worlds of Studio Ghibli
Studio Ghibli; Yoji Takeshige
Tokyo: Pie International, 2025.“Featuring more than 800 pieces of background art, this beautiful hardcover is a complete and enduring publication allowing readers to thoroughly enjoy backgrounds from each and every scene of the Ghibli masterpieces. Including art from each of Studio Ghibli’s twenty-seven films, these pages offer a glimpse into techniques that bring depth and life to these cherished cinematic worlds, revealing a mastery of brushwork, colour and perspective. Editorial supervision by Yoji Takeshige. This is a must-have book for fans of Ghibli films and creators involved in the animation industry. Editorial Supervisor: Yoji Takeshige, background artist and art director for many Ghibli films.” (publisher’s blurb)
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[Dream Town: Tokyo Photo Collection by Kineo Kuwabara]
Kineo Kuwabara
Tokyo: Shobunsha, 1977.Photobook by Japanese photographer Kineo Kuwabara (1913-2007) documenting Tokyo from the 1930s to the 1970s.
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[Manshu Showa Jugonen: Kuwabara Kineo shashin shu]
Kineo Kuwabara
Tokyo: Shobunsha, 1974.Photobook by Japanese photographer Kineo Kuwabara (1913-2007) documenting his trip to Manchuria in 1940.
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Made in U.S.A. Catalog, 1975 and Made in U.S.A.-2 Scrapbook of America, 1976 (2 Volumes)
Yoshihisa Kinameri; Jiro Ishikawa
Tokyo: Yomiuri Shimbun, 1975.Two catalogues of American fashion, culture, tools, and lifestyle products, an earlier project from the founders of Popeye magazine, who travelled the United States to put together these volumes which became a massive driver of American lifestyle and fashion influence in Japanese culture. Today, they remain a detailed catalogue of 1970s American culture. Both volumes include detailed shopping guides to numerous American cities. Unrecorded in OCLC or CiNii,
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Kishin’s Photo Workshop: Take it Snappy!
Kishin Shinoyama
Tokyo: Gakken, 1987.Shinoyama photo school. This copy inscribed by Kishin.
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Hashi o wataru to / Beyond the Bridge
Kishin Shinoyama
Tokyo: Qantas, 1976.Collection of photographs of Australia by leading Japanese photographer Kishin, published and distributed by Qantas in the 1970s. The first half devoted to beach shots.
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Glamours 106
Kishin Shinoyama
Tokyo: Shueisha, 1973.106 Japanese celebrities captured in a large format photo book. This copy inscribed by Kishin.
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Inter-Traveller: People Playing with the Dead
Tomoko Konoike
Tokyo: Hatori Press, 2009. -
Ben Westwood
Ben Westwood
Tokyo: E. T. Insolite, 1999.“A celebration of femininity — fetish photography by Ben Westwood, the son of British fashion designer Vivienne Westwood. The first monograph of the new star of U.K. fetish photography, Ben Westwood, is full of fetish and chic costumes from “Agent Provokature,” the cultic lingerie shop that his beloved brother runs. This is his first photo collection. Many erotic photos of women posing provocatively in lingerie and fetish gear. Some partial nudity, a little full nudity.” (publisher’s blurb)
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Momoyama Tea Utensils: A New View
Curatorial Division, Nezu Museum
Tokyo: Nezu Museum, 2018.Catalogue for an exhibition of ceramics from the Momoyama period, and the start of the Edo period.
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Dobangaka kiyohara keiko sakuhinshu
Keiko Kiyohara
Tokyo: Abe Shuppan, 2017.Monograph of Japanese printmaker Keiko Kiyohara (1955-1987). This copy with the catalogue, The Etcher, Kiyohara Keiko Retrospective, from the Hachioji Yumi Art Museum (2017) laid in.
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Soseiki: Wakaki hi no geijutsukatachi / Eikoh Hosoe Portraits
Eikoh Hosoe
Tokyo: Kokusho Kankokai, 2012.125 mostly previously unpublished portraits of 35 of Japan’s leading 20th century artists in their youth. Features butoh dancers, writers, artists, and creatives such as Yayoi Kusama, Yukio Mishima, Kazuo Ohno, Tatsumi Hijikata, Min Tanaka, Akira Sato, Yoko Ashikawa, Masuo Ikeda, Shuji Terayama, and others. Limited to 1,500 unnumbered copies, this copy signed by Eikoh to the front free endpaper.
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La Passion du Christ
Georges Rouault; D’Andre Suares
Tokyo: Editions Iwanami Shoten, 1975.The Japanese production of Rouault’s The Passion of Christ with 54 colour plates tipped on large sheets of handmade paper housed in a custom cloth folder with Andre Suares poems in the original French and 151 page book in Japanese with the Rouault’s wood engravings in the text. Limited to 900 numbered copies, of which this is 354.
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Synthesis
Kohei Nawa
Tokyo: AKAAKA Art Publishing, 2011.The extensive catalogue accompanying the 2011 solo exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo, the first to present a comprehensive view of all of Nawa’s work to date. Includes an original work by Kohei Nawa mounted in an enclosure on the lower board.
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Claude Alexandre
Claude Alexandre
Tokyo: Treville, 1992.Black and white S&M photography.
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Sandra Bullock
Kazuo Kajiwara
Tokyo: Haga Shoten, 1997.Japanese photobook chronicling Bullock’s career in the late 80s through the 90s with extensive photographs.
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Ay-O’s Rainbow Prints: Catalogue Raisonne, 1954-1979
Ay-O
Tokyo: Sohbun-Sha, 1979.Ay-O’s signature rainbow prints, made famous at the 1966 Venice Biennale, are showcased in this catalogue along with some of his other significant works. During the 1960s and 1970s Ay-O (1931-) was at the forefront of the Fluxus movement, an international community of artists, including Yoko Ono, who emphasized the importance of art making over the finished product. Numbered first edition of 200 copies, of which this is number 47.