Japanese: Photobook

Many classic photobooks focus on Japan's rapid postwar transformation. Shomei Tomatsu's Chewing Gum and Chocolate is a definitive portrait of postwar Japan, while Shin Yanagisawa used precise framing to document Tokyo's "scrap and build" cycles in the 1960s.

Perhaps the most famous turning point in Japanese photography was the creation of the short-lived but revolutionary magazine in 1968. Led by photographers like Daido Moriyama and Takuma Nakahira , this movement rejected clean, commercial photography. Instead, they pioneered the Are-Bure-Boke aesthetic: Are : Grainy Bure : Blurry Boke : Out-of-focus japanese photobook