02
Jul
12

Takuma Nakahira : ‘For a Language to Come’ (Photography)

::

::
‘For a Language to Come’
Takuma Nakahira
Photographs
1970
::

::
‘For a Language to Come’
Takuma Nakahira
Photographs
1970
::

::
‘For a Language to Come’
Takuma Nakahira
Photographs
1970
::

::
‘For a Language to Come’
Takuma Nakahira
Photographs
1970
::

::
‘For a Language to Come’
Takuma Nakahira
Photographs
1970
::

::
‘For a Language to Come’
Takuma Nakahira
Photographs
1970
::

::
‘For a Language to Come’
Takuma Nakahira
Photographs
1970
::

Blurred, grainy and out-of-focus was the modus operandi of the Japanese Provoke photographers of the early 1970s, and Takuma Nakahira was the intellectual granddaddy of them all. This reprint of his classic ‘For a Language to Come’ is shot with harsh black and white images printed full bleed across every page and is essential viewing for anybody with an interest in the history of photography. It’s a book of landscapes, urban landscapes where life clings to the shadows and corners of the pictures, where light burns like fire and the only solace is to be found in the underpasses and tunnels of the city that Nakahira portrays. And what a city! It’s an unwelcoming place, a Tokyo where post-war modernisation and political protest have combined to create a world lacking in any warmth or humanity.

Nakahira’s Tokyo is a pre-apocalyptic dead zone. Or perhaps it’s a post-apocalyptic deadzone. It doesn’t really matter because the effect is the same; a place where people lie injured in waiting rooms, where phone lines and power cables suggest an entity that has taken on its own hostile life, where the only means of escape are suggested by the trackways in the road and in the repeated pictures of a cold and turbulent ocean. And that’s the fun part. For a Language to Come also serves as a thesis for Nakahira’s complex forays in the semiotics of visual language and his existentialist idea that photography “consists only in clarifying the fact that material things are things.” A few years after For a Language to Come was published, Takahira wrote that “Extremely grainy images and intentionally unfocussed photographs in particular, have already become mere decoration.” I can think of many examples where that might be true, but Nakahira’s case, it most definitely is not. — Text : Colin Pantall

::

Takuma Nakahira : Shugo Arts

Takuma Nakahira : American Suburb X

‘For a Language to Come’ – View Book : Vimeo

::


2 Responses to “Takuma Nakahira : ‘For a Language to Come’ (Photography)”


  1. 1 IvonesioRamos
    July 2, 2012 at 2:56 pm

    Very important.


Leave a comment


Ai : Series : Photography Book

aesthetic investig...
By Azurebumble

email address

Join 507 other subscribers