Family
“Fukase explore sa nostalgie, mais aussi son présent…Celle-ci vire parfois à lincongru, au comique et surtout à létonnement”. / “Fukase explores his nostalgia but also his present…this turns sometimes toward incongruity, comedy, and above all surprise” Vanity Fair France
“An amusing parody of the traditional family portrait that is both theatrical and personal” Creative Review
This collection […] turns the idea of the family portrait on its head, simultaneously reinvigorating and ridiculing it.” Japan Times
“My entire family, whose image I see inverted in the frosted glass, will die one day. This camera, which reflects and freezes their images, is actually a device for archiving death”. Masahisa Fukase
For three generations the Fukase family ran a photography studio in Bifuka, a small provincial town in the northern Japanese province of Hokkaido. In August 1971, at the age of 35, Masahisa Fukase returned home from Tokyo, where he had moved in the 1950s. He realised that the Fukase Photographic Studio, which his younger brother managed, combined with the growing family members, constituted the perfect subject for a series of portraits. Between 1971 and 1989, he returned regularly and used the family studio, the large-format Anthony view camera and the changing family line-up as the basis for the series. True to his style, Fukase often introduced third-party models and humorous elements to juxtapose the ineluctable reality of time passing and the dwindling family group. He continued the series through his fathers death in 1987, up until the closure of the Fukase studio due to bankruptcy in 1989, and the consequential dispersion of the family.
Family (Kazoku) was released in 1991, and was Fukases last book. It begins with a photograph of the family studio and the following 31 images are family portraits made in the studio in chronological order. The book includes an extensive text written by Fukase himself and a modern essay by Tomo Kosuga.
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