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Nobuyoshi Araki

    May 25, 1940

    Nobuyoshi Araki is a Japanese photographer and contemporary artist, renowned for his prolific and often provocative body of work. His output, spanning hundreds of published books, is characterized by raw honesty, exploring themes of eroticism, death, and everyday life with an uncompromising visual intensity. Araki's distinctive style captures the body and its relationship to the surrounding world, frequently emphasizing intimacy and vulnerability. His influence extends beyond photography, inspiring artists across various mediums and leaving an indelible mark on contemporary art.

    Araki by Araki
    Araki. Tokyo lucky hole
    Leben und Tod
    Andy Warhol, ladies & gentlemen, sex parts and torsos
    Bondage
    Araki
    • 2020

      Leben und Tod

      • 72 pages
      • 3 hours of reading

      Exploring profound themes of life and death, this project showcases a poignant series that reflects on the loss of the photographer's uncle and step-father. It intertwines intimate images of his mother and Bavarian homeland with symbolic representations of fertility and vitality captured during a trip to Bhutan with his partner. The book emerges from a collaborative exhibition, offering a deeply personal narrative that connects personal grief with broader themes of existence and renewal.

      Leben und Tod
    • 2012

      Bondage

      • 560 pages
      • 20 hours of reading

      This is a collection of Bondage art photographs by Japanese photographer Nobuyoshi Araki.

      Bondage
    • 2011

      Nobuyoshi Araki. Self Life Death

      • 196 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      "This new abridged edition of the highly acclaimed Self Life Death provides an overview of Nobuyoshi Araki's (b.1940) prolific forty year career, featuring his finest and most iconic images in a new, expanded format. Arguably Japan's greatest living photographer - and certainly its most controversial - Araki consistently challenges artistic and social conventions in postwar Japan. The book examines Araki's work from a wide variety of viewpoints: Japanese and European; female and male, including all his major works, such as Sentimental Journey (1971), Tokyo Story (1989) and Erotos (1993). Araki's writings, widely admired and published in Japan, which were translated into English for the first time for Self Life Death, are also included. At this affordable and accessible format, a new audience of photography students and enthusiasts will be able to own a book on this influential photographer."--Publisher's description

      Nobuyoshi Araki. Self Life Death
    • 2009

      Araki

      • 512 pages
      • 18 hours of reading
      4.6(158)Add rating

      "Nobuyoshi Araki distills decades' worth of images down ot 512 pages in this ultimate retrospective of his career. This intimate collection delves deep into his best-known imagery: Tokyo street scenes; faces and foods; colorful, sensual flowers; female genitalia; and the Japanese art of bondage"--Book flap

      Araki
    • 2008
    • 2005
    • 2003

      Araki by Araki

      The Photographer's Personal Selection

      • 412 pages
      • 15 hours of reading

      " There is nothing more interesting than women, and nothing more exciting." -Nobuyoshi ArakiAraki by Araki is a record of the career of Nobuyoshi Araki, self-styled "photomaniac" and permanent enfant terrible of the Japanese art world. Published to mark the artist's sixty-third birthday on May 25, 2003, this volume features 2002 photographs covering his entire career from 1963 to 2002.Sex-trade voyeur, recorder of Tokyo cityscapes, chronicler of married life, or experimental photo artist - no matter what your image of Araki, this collection will reveal new aspects of his talent, as it traces his unique vision over forty prolific years.All the pictures were selected by Araki himself (who also provides an original commentary), making Araki by Araki not only a comprehensive but highly personal overview of the artist's work to date. High quality color and duotone black and white printing ensure the highest standard of reproductionthroughout.

      Araki by Araki
    • 2003

      Here you will find over 400 Polaroids by Andy Warhol of street hustlers and call boys engaging in sexual acts and posing as drag queens. The pictures inspired paintings known as the Torso Series but, as Bob Colacello recounts, were known around the office as the Cocks, Cunts, and Assholes Series.

      Andy Warhol, ladies & gentlemen, sex parts and torsos