
Legends: Japan’s Most Notable Names
Araki Nobuyoshi: An Artistic Rebel, Unbowed
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The Photographic Face of Japan
Photography Age was shuttered in 1988 following a stiff warning from the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department over its lurid nudity. Yet Araki continued to publish a series of outstanding collections of his own, including Tokyo monogatari (Tokyo Story). This work overlaid the transformation of the city in which he had been born and raised with the changing face of Japan itself, as the nation transitioned from the wartime and postwar Shōwa era (1926–89) to the Heisei era (1989–).
However, it was also around this time that Araki faced a personal catastrophe. His wife Yōko, a constant companion of 20 years, was diagnosed with uterine cancer and passed away in 1990. As a photographer, Araki embraced this sudden reversal of fortune, seeking to ride out the crisis by channeling it into his work. In 1991, he published those results in his powerful collection Senchimentaru na tabi: Fuyu no tabi (Sentimental Journey/Winter Journey, 1991), coupling the photographs taken 20 years earlier for Sentimental Journey with his Winter Journey photo diary of date-stamped photographs shot with a compact camera before and after Yōko's death. The exquisitely polished photographs and text were a comprehensive statement of all that Araki had gained and achieved in his unremitting pursuit of “personal photography.”
Sentimental Journey/Winter Journey.
Yōko’s death marked a turning point for the artist. Araki launched himself into what he called a “second round” of work, seeking ever-greater heights of photographic expression. The collections published during this period of his life—Tokyo rakkī hōru (Tokyo Lucky Hall, 1990), Kūkei/Kinkei (Laments: Skyscapes / From Close-range, 1991),and Erotosu (Erotos, 1993)—are all powerful masterpieces, buzzing with creative tension.
It was also during this period that Araki’s work finally began to be recognized abroad, beginning with the AKT-TOKYO 1971–1991 exhibition at Forum Stadtpark in Graz, Austria (an exhibition that later toured Europe). It was followed soon after by large solo exhibitions of Araki’s work in Vienna, Paris, Rome, Taipei, London and other world cities.
Back home as well, the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo held the one-man Araki exhibition Senchimentaru na shashin, jinsei (Sentimental Photography, Sentimental Life), while Heibonsha launched the monumental Araki Nobuyoshi shashin zenshū (The Works of Nobuyoshi Araki) in 20 volumes over the course of 1996–97. These and other shows and publications cemented once and for all Araki’s reputation as one of Japan’s foremost contemporary photographers.
Even with all these accomplishments behind him, Araki’s daring spirit of experimentation shows no sign of weakening. Since the turn of the century, his photographic expression has become ever more freewheeling as he has begun to energetically manipulate his photographs, painting over them, writing on them, and creating photo collages. He now sometimes holds shows purely as a painter, or even a calligrapher. His 2009 Isaku: Sora 2 (2TheSky, My Ender) is a huge collection of 254 works created between January 2009 and August 15 of that year that is almost a visual diary. In it, photographs, paintings, and collages merge into one harmonious whole as Araki’s style of freely mixing and merging Eros and Thanotos achieves a unique pinnacle of its own.
Undiminished Creative Aspirations
In 2008 Araki was hospitalized and underwent surgery for prostate cancer. In 2010 his beloved cat Chiro died at the great age of 22. That loss was followed in 2011 by the Great East Japan Earthquake, and in 2013 by an obstructed retinal artery that cost Araki most of the vision in his right eye. For many years now, the course of Araki’s life has been full of negatives. It seems almost as if that exquisite balance of Erotos that the artist has maintained for so many years is now tilting inexorably toward Thanotos. Yet when we view his most recent photo series —works like Tōkyō zenritsugan (Tokyo Prostate Cancer, 2009) documenting the days before and after his surgery, the heart-rending record of Chiro’s battle with illness in Chiro aishi (Chiro Love Death, 2010), or his 2014 Sagan no koi (Love on the Left Eye), in which Araki blacks out the right half of his negatives with a marker pen—we can see how the artist continues to create to this day, his flourishing creative energy undiminished.
In 2014, Araki held three linked exhibitions titled Ōjō shashin (Paradise) at the Toyota Municipal Museum of Art, the Niigata City Art Museum, and the Shiseido Gallery in Tokyo. In these shows he presented powerful new works, including his “Road” photo series shot looking directly down at the street below from the apartment where he lives (published later that year in the collection Dōro (Road, 2014), and his Higashi no sora (Eastern Sky) series created following the 2011 earthquake by continuously shooting the sky in the direction of stricken Fukushima. From April to September 2016, the Musée Guimet Asian art museum in Paris presented a major respective titled simply Araki that also included 98 new works, again impressing European audiences with the immense power of his creative world.
Tombeau Tokyo, containing works displayed at the Musée Guimet Araki retrospective.
Araki was once a minor figure known only to the cognoscenti. He is now a major global artist who continues to labor on the frontlines of photographic expression. Yet over all these long years his fundamental creative style has never changed. At age 76 there is some concern about Araki’s health, but when I met him recently he was full of vim and vigor. “This year I want to show new work in at least five places,” he declared in great sprits. I suspect that Araki will continue to play brilliantly with different images, sometimes laced with humor, and will continue to pull his viewers deeper into his own magical world for years still to come.
Print from Tombeau Tokyo, 2016. Gelatin silver print. (© the artist/courtesy of Taka Ishii Gallery)