April 2015
After the blockbuster Tattoo posting, here is a rather more still, quiet posting. Another nine images rescued from the dustbin of history…
I bought an anonymous Japanese family photographic album from Daylesford in country Victoria recently for $25 (US$35). There were many images missing, but the thirty that were present are just stunning. I have been scanning them and gently digitally cleaning them since, and this is the second of three postings on the images. I love their immediacy, their vernacular language and intimate feel and the irregular shape and cut of the prints. Some of the photographs are very small in size.
The serenity, the beauty and the attention to the form of the hair is quite captivating. They have me entranced. Just delightful.
Marcus
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Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.
Anonymous
Untitled
from a Japanese family photography album
c. 1920-30s
Anonymous
Untitled
from a Japanese family photography album
c. 1920-30s
Anonymous
Untitled
from a Japanese family photography album
c. 1920-30s
Anonymous
Untitled (detail)
from a Japanese family photography album
c. 1920-30s
Anonymous
Untitled
from a Japanese family photography album
c. 1920-30s
Anonymous
Untitled (detail)
from a Japanese family photography album
c. 1920-30s
Anonymous
Untitled
from a Japanese family photography album
c. 1920-30s
Anonymous
Untitled
from a Japanese family photography album
c. 1920-30s
Anonymous
Untitled (detail)
from a Japanese family photography album
c. 1920-30s
Anonymous
Untitled [Four women in traditional Japanese dress]
from a Japanese family photography album
c. 1920-30s
Anonymous
Untitled
from a Japanese family photography album
c. 1920-30s
Anonymous
Untitled (detail)
from a Japanese family photography album
c. 1920-30s
Anonymous
Untitled
from a Japanese family photography album
c. 1920-30s
Filed under: beauty, black and white photography, documentary photography, existence, intimacy, light, memory, photographic series, photography, portrait, reality, space, time, works on paper Tagged: 1920s Japan, 1920s Japanese photography, 1930s Japan, family photographic album, Japanese family photography album, Japanese kimono, Japanese photography, Japanese photography before Second World War, portrait photography, portraiture, vernacular photography
