Issei Suda

Book Review Issei Suda: โ€œ78โ€

ยฉ Issei Suda

From Tokyo to its surrounding prefectures, a book recently published by Chose Commune reveals the Japanese photography masterโ€™s striking world, immersed in urban energy and a playful observation of people that distill it.


โ”€โ”€โ”€ by Laurence Cornet, August 1, 2019
  • Daido Moriyamaโ€™s coal-textured photographs bluntly depicting urban life have imprinted a signature on Japanese photography. Joining the magazine Provoke early on, Moriyama has contributed to defining what was by the time considered the new photographic expression, along with many artists of his generation. Yet, the Japanese photography scene is far more complex and diverse, including photographers such as Masahisa Fukase and Issei Suda, both of whom restlessly experimented and documented with their camera.

    Black and white portrait of a young girl in japan by Issei Suda
    Takasaki, Gunma, 1978 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    While Suda died a few months ago, he left with a promise to Cecile Poimboeuf-Koizumi, co-founder of Editions Chose Commune, to publish a book of his lesser-known work. Prolific as he was, his home is sinking under boxes of archives that Poimboeuf-Koizumi carefully explored, putting together a selection that draws a portrait of Tokyo and its surroundings as much as of the photographer himself.

    The result was recently published, with the printing quality that the publisher has gotten us used to, shedding light on Sudaโ€™s mastery of light.

    black and white portrait of an elderly woman walking in Tokyo, Japan. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Asakusa, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Going through the photographs, the focus on movement is striking. Each character captured by Suda seems in the midst of a choreography, both individually and as a group of bodies interacting with each other. An old lady so curved by the years that she seems to curtsy the floor; groups of friends walking in the streets whose bodies are fragmented in independent parts by the light; hair twirled by the wind echoing the comb of feathers of the bird sitting on a womanโ€™s shoulder. Gestures are so vividly expressive they seem posed.

    The sequencing of the book โ€“ titled โ€œ78โ€ as a reference to both the number of photographs it brings together and to the age at which Suda died โ€“ emphasizes this aspect of the photographerโ€™s work. Even static objects like wall paintings, umbrellas, trees, and carts join the dance. No doubt Suda sharpened this subtle skill at the beginning of his career, in 1967, working as a stage photographer and documentarist of the avant-garde theatre group โ€œTenjo Sajiki,โ€ a troupe directed by poet-playwright Terayama Shuji.

    Black and white portrait of three boys in Tokyo, japan by Issei Suda
    Nishinippori, Tokyo, 1979 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Trained on the stages of theater too, Sudaโ€™s eye for costumes is captivating. For many years, he traveled in Japan from festival to festival to document folkloric traditions before they disappear. And when in the street of his own city, he brought the same attention to accessories. In this book, they unravel by touches the scope of Tokyoโ€™s motley social fabric โ€“ the paint-stained jacket of the worker, the silk kimono of the elegant lady, the ruffle dress of the schoolgirl, the apron of the cook, the shorts of the fisherman, the tweed suit of the businessman. Combined with motions, the outfits reveal the true nature of Sudaโ€™s random encounters. Their attitude and surroundings come together to tell a unique story โ€“ they are not stereotypes but individuals in the most intriguing way.

    two women walking in the streets of Japan with a monkey. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Kanuma, Tochigi, 1973 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Despite their precision, never are Sudaโ€™s photographs pretentious. They
    render the ordinary, dotted with a mystery that may as well be the generosity and curiosity of the photographer himself. That hint at extraordinary is what makes Sudaโ€™s photographs so captivating. While they give a sense of an era โ€“ most photographs from the selection were shot in the 1970s in Tokyo and the capitalโ€™s surroundings -, the images crystalize scenes that would otherwise have gone unnoticed, that very moment when patterns and gestures form another image.

    black and white portrait of a woman and a man by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1975 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Carefully rejecting from the frame everything deemed unnecessary and likely to divert from the remarkable essence of his subjects, Suda improvises with the theater of every day. So much so they at times seem playful โ€“ a man chatting at a window, his head covered by the curtain as if hiding; siblings using large leaves as oversized hats; hands passing glasses, cups, and pots as in an illusionist trick; a delivery man with a bouquet of flowers as large as his bike.

     The flowers, that also serve as a motive for the cover of the book, could be seen as a reference to Sudaโ€™s first personal series, โ€œFรปshi Kadenโ€, that literally means โ€œthe transmission of the flower of acting styleโ€ and refers to a theatrical process consisting in the creation of a new apparition through the performing act. 

    Black and white portrait of two boys in japan by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Losing ourselves in Sudaโ€™s unusual views of everyday life, framing reality to make it look appealingly unusual, one can only think that he had appropriated the concept to photography and developed it throughout his entire work.

     

    Issei Suda / Editions Chose Commune
    Book available for purchase here.

    All images ยฉ Issei Suda

    Issei Suda: "78" | The Independent Photographer
    Issei Suda

    Book Review Issei Suda: “78”

    © Issei Suda

    From Tokyo to its surrounding prefectures, a book recently published by Chose Commune reveals the Japanese photography masterโ€™s striking world, immersed in urban energy and a playful observation of people that distill it.


    โ”€โ”€โ”€ by Laurence Cornet, August 1, 2019
  • Daido Moriyamaโ€™s coal-textured photographs bluntly depicting urban life have imprinted a signature on Japanese photography. Joining the magazine Provoke early on, Moriyama has contributed to defining what was by the time considered the new photographic expression, along with many artists of his generation. Yet, the Japanese photography scene is far more complex and diverse, including photographers such as Masahisa Fukase and Issei Suda, both of whom restlessly experimented and documented with their camera.

    Black and white portrait of a young girl in japan by Issei Suda
    Takasaki, Gunma, 1978 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    While Suda died a few months ago, he left with a promise to Cecile Poimboeuf-Koizumi, co-founder of Editions Chose Commune, to publish a book of his lesser-known work. Prolific as he was, his home is sinking under boxes of archives that Poimboeuf-Koizumi carefully explored, putting together a selection that draws a portrait of Tokyo and its surroundings as much as of the photographer himself.

    The result was recently published, with the printing quality that the publisher has gotten us used to, shedding light on Sudaโ€™s mastery of light.

    black and white portrait of an elderly woman walking in Tokyo, Japan. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Asakusa, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Going through the photographs, the focus on movement is striking. Each character captured by Suda seems in the midst of a choreography, both individually and as a group of bodies interacting with each other. An old lady so curved by the years that she seems to curtsy the floor; groups of friends walking in the streets whose bodies are fragmented in independent parts by the light; hair twirled by the wind echoing the comb of feathers of the bird sitting on a womanโ€™s shoulder. Gestures are so vividly expressive they seem posed.

    The sequencing of the book โ€“ titled โ€œ78โ€ as a reference to both the number of photographs it brings together and to the age at which Suda died โ€“ emphasizes this aspect of the photographerโ€™s work. Even static objects like wall paintings, umbrellas, trees, and carts join the dance. No doubt Suda sharpened this subtle skill at the beginning of his career, in 1967, working as a stage photographer and documentarist of the avant-garde theatre group โ€œTenjo Sajiki,โ€ a troupe directed by poet-playwright Terayama Shuji.

    Black and white portrait of three boys in Tokyo, japan by Issei Suda
    Nishinippori, Tokyo, 1979 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Trained on the stages of theater too, Sudaโ€™s eye for costumes is captivating. For many years, he traveled in Japan from festival to festival to document folkloric traditions before they disappear. And when in the street of his own city, he brought the same attention to accessories. In this book, they unravel by touches the scope of Tokyoโ€™s motley social fabric โ€“ the paint-stained jacket of the worker, the silk kimono of the elegant lady, the ruffle dress of the schoolgirl, the apron of the cook, the shorts of the fisherman, the tweed suit of the businessman. Combined with motions, the outfits reveal the true nature of Sudaโ€™s random encounters. Their attitude and surroundings come together to tell a unique story โ€“ they are not stereotypes but individuals in the most intriguing way.

    two women walking in the streets of Japan with a monkey. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Kanuma, Tochigi, 1973 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Despite their precision, never are Sudaโ€™s photographs pretentious. They
    render the ordinary, dotted with a mystery that may as well be the generosity and curiosity of the photographer himself. That hint at extraordinary is what makes Sudaโ€™s photographs so captivating. While they give a sense of an era โ€“ most photographs from the selection were shot in the 1970s in Tokyo and the capitalโ€™s surroundings -, the images crystalize scenes that would otherwise have gone unnoticed, that very moment when patterns and gestures form another image.

    black and white portrait of a woman and a man by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1975 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Carefully rejecting from the frame everything deemed unnecessary and likely to divert from the remarkable essence of his subjects, Suda improvises with the theater of every day. So much so they at times seem playful โ€“ a man chatting at a window, his head covered by the curtain as if hiding; siblings using large leaves as oversized hats; hands passing glasses, cups, and pots as in an illusionist trick; a delivery man with a bouquet of flowers as large as his bike.

    ย The flowers, that also serve as a motive for the cover of the book, could be seen as a reference to Sudaโ€™s first personal series, โ€œFรปshi Kadenโ€, that literally means โ€œthe transmission of the flower of acting styleโ€ and refers to a theatrical process consisting in the creation of a new apparition through the performing act.ย 

    Black and white portrait of two boys in japan by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Losing ourselves in Sudaโ€™s unusual views of everyday life, framing reality to make it look appealingly unusual, one can only think that he had appropriated the concept to photography and developed it throughout his entire work.

     

    Issei Suda / Editions Chose Commune
    Book available for purchase here.

    All images ยฉ Issei Suda

    Issei Suda: "78" | The Independent Photographer
    Issei Suda

    Book Review Issei Suda: โ€œ78โ€

    ยฉ Issei Suda

    From Tokyo to its surrounding prefectures, a book recently published by Chose Commune reveals the Japanese photography masterโ€™s striking world, immersed in urban energy and a playful observation of people that distill it.


    โ”€โ”€โ”€ by Laurence Cornet, August 1, 2019
  • Daido Moriyamaโ€™s coal-textured photographs bluntly depicting urban life have imprinted a signature on Japanese photography. Joining the magazine Provoke early on, Moriyama has contributed to defining what was by the time considered the new photographic expression, along with many artists of his generation. Yet, the Japanese photography scene is far more complex and diverse, including photographers such as Masahisa Fukase and Issei Suda, both of whom restlessly experimented and documented with their camera.

    Black and white portrait of a young girl in japan by Issei Suda
    Takasaki, Gunma, 1978 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    While Suda died a few months ago, he left with a promise to Cecile Poimboeuf-Koizumi, co-founder of Editions Chose Commune, to publish a book of his lesser-known work. Prolific as he was, his home is sinking under boxes of archives that Poimboeuf-Koizumi carefully explored, putting together a selection that draws a portrait of Tokyo and its surroundings as much as of the photographer himself.

    The result was recently published, with the printing quality that the publisher has gotten us used to, shedding light on Sudaโ€™s mastery of light.

    black and white portrait of an elderly woman walking in Tokyo, Japan. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Asakusa, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Going through the photographs, the focus on movement is striking. Each character captured by Suda seems in the midst of a choreography, both individually and as a group of bodies interacting with each other. An old lady so curved by the years that she seems to curtsy the floor; groups of friends walking in the streets whose bodies are fragmented in independent parts by the light; hair twirled by the wind echoing the comb of feathers of the bird sitting on a womanโ€™s shoulder. Gestures are so vividly expressive they seem posed.

    The sequencing of the book โ€“ titled โ€œ78โ€ as a reference to both the number of photographs it brings together and to the age at which Suda died โ€“ emphasizes this aspect of the photographerโ€™s work. Even static objects like wall paintings, umbrellas, trees, and carts join the dance. No doubt Suda sharpened this subtle skill at the beginning of his career, in 1967, working as a stage photographer and documentarist of the avant-garde theatre group โ€œTenjo Sajiki,โ€ a troupe directed by poet-playwright Terayama Shuji.

    Black and white portrait of three boys in Tokyo, japan by Issei Suda
    Nishinippori, Tokyo, 1979 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Trained on the stages of theater too, Sudaโ€™s eye for costumes is captivating. For many years, he traveled in Japan from festival to festival to document folkloric traditions before they disappear. And when in the street of his own city, he brought the same attention to accessories. In this book, they unravel by touches the scope of Tokyoโ€™s motley social fabric โ€“ the paint-stained jacket of the worker, the silk kimono of the elegant lady, the ruffle dress of the schoolgirl, the apron of the cook, the shorts of the fisherman, the tweed suit of the businessman. Combined with motions, the outfits reveal the true nature of Sudaโ€™s random encounters. Their attitude and surroundings come together to tell a unique story โ€“ they are not stereotypes but individuals in the most intriguing way.

    two women walking in the streets of Japan with a monkey. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Kanuma, Tochigi, 1973 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Despite their precision, never are Sudaโ€™s photographs pretentious. They
    render the ordinary, dotted with a mystery that may as well be the generosity and curiosity of the photographer himself. That hint at extraordinary is what makes Sudaโ€™s photographs so captivating. While they give a sense of an era โ€“ most photographs from the selection were shot in the 1970s in Tokyo and the capitalโ€™s surroundings -, the images crystalize scenes that would otherwise have gone unnoticed, that very moment when patterns and gestures form another image.

    black and white portrait of a woman and a man by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1975 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Carefully rejecting from the frame everything deemed unnecessary and likely to divert from the remarkable essence of his subjects, Suda improvises with the theater of every day. So much so they at times seem playful โ€“ a man chatting at a window, his head covered by the curtain as if hiding; siblings using large leaves as oversized hats; hands passing glasses, cups, and pots as in an illusionist trick; a delivery man with a bouquet of flowers as large as his bike.

     The flowers, that also serve as a motive for the cover of the book, could be seen as a reference to Sudaโ€™s first personal series, โ€œFรปshi Kadenโ€, that literally means โ€œthe transmission of the flower of acting styleโ€ and refers to a theatrical process consisting in the creation of a new apparition through the performing act. 

    Black and white portrait of two boys in japan by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Losing ourselves in Sudaโ€™s unusual views of everyday life, framing reality to make it look appealingly unusual, one can only think that he had appropriated the concept to photography and developed it throughout his entire work.

     

    Issei Suda / Editions Chose Commune
    Book available for purchase here.

    All images ยฉ Issei Suda

    Issei Suda: "78" | The Independent Photographer
    Issei Suda

    Book Review Issei Suda: “78”

    © Issei Suda

    From Tokyo to its surrounding prefectures, a book recently published by Chose Commune reveals the Japanese photography masterโ€™s striking world, immersed in urban energy and a playful observation of people that distill it.


    โ”€โ”€โ”€ by Laurence Cornet, August 1, 2019
  • Daido Moriyamaโ€™s coal-textured photographs bluntly depicting urban life have imprinted a signature on Japanese photography. Joining the magazine Provoke early on, Moriyama has contributed to defining what was by the time considered the new photographic expression, along with many artists of his generation. Yet, the Japanese photography scene is far more complex and diverse, including photographers such as Masahisa Fukase and Issei Suda, both of whom restlessly experimented and documented with their camera.

    Black and white portrait of a young girl in japan by Issei Suda
    Takasaki, Gunma, 1978 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    While Suda died a few months ago, he left with a promise to Cecile Poimboeuf-Koizumi, co-founder of Editions Chose Commune, to publish a book of his lesser-known work. Prolific as he was, his home is sinking under boxes of archives that Poimboeuf-Koizumi carefully explored, putting together a selection that draws a portrait of Tokyo and its surroundings as much as of the photographer himself.

    The result was recently published, with the printing quality that the publisher has gotten us used to, shedding light on Sudaโ€™s mastery of light.

    black and white portrait of an elderly woman walking in Tokyo, Japan. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Asakusa, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Going through the photographs, the focus on movement is striking. Each character captured by Suda seems in the midst of a choreography, both individually and as a group of bodies interacting with each other. An old lady so curved by the years that she seems to curtsy the floor; groups of friends walking in the streets whose bodies are fragmented in independent parts by the light; hair twirled by the wind echoing the comb of feathers of the bird sitting on a womanโ€™s shoulder. Gestures are so vividly expressive they seem posed.

    The sequencing of the book โ€“ titled โ€œ78โ€ as a reference to both the number of photographs it brings together and to the age at which Suda died โ€“ emphasizes this aspect of the photographerโ€™s work. Even static objects like wall paintings, umbrellas, trees, and carts join the dance. No doubt Suda sharpened this subtle skill at the beginning of his career, in 1967, working as a stage photographer and documentarist of the avant-garde theatre group โ€œTenjo Sajiki,โ€ a troupe directed by poet-playwright Terayama Shuji.

    Black and white portrait of three boys in Tokyo, japan by Issei Suda
    Nishinippori, Tokyo, 1979 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Trained on the stages of theater too, Sudaโ€™s eye for costumes is captivating. For many years, he traveled in Japan from festival to festival to document folkloric traditions before they disappear. And when in the street of his own city, he brought the same attention to accessories. In this book, they unravel by touches the scope of Tokyoโ€™s motley social fabric โ€“ the paint-stained jacket of the worker, the silk kimono of the elegant lady, the ruffle dress of the schoolgirl, the apron of the cook, the shorts of the fisherman, the tweed suit of the businessman. Combined with motions, the outfits reveal the true nature of Sudaโ€™s random encounters. Their attitude and surroundings come together to tell a unique story โ€“ they are not stereotypes but individuals in the most intriguing way.

    two women walking in the streets of Japan with a monkey. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Kanuma, Tochigi, 1973 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Despite their precision, never are Sudaโ€™s photographs pretentious. They
    render the ordinary, dotted with a mystery that may as well be the generosity and curiosity of the photographer himself. That hint at extraordinary is what makes Sudaโ€™s photographs so captivating. While they give a sense of an era โ€“ most photographs from the selection were shot in the 1970s in Tokyo and the capitalโ€™s surroundings -, the images crystalize scenes that would otherwise have gone unnoticed, that very moment when patterns and gestures form another image.

    black and white portrait of a woman and a man by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1975 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Carefully rejecting from the frame everything deemed unnecessary and likely to divert from the remarkable essence of his subjects, Suda improvises with the theater of every day. So much so they at times seem playful โ€“ a man chatting at a window, his head covered by the curtain as if hiding; siblings using large leaves as oversized hats; hands passing glasses, cups, and pots as in an illusionist trick; a delivery man with a bouquet of flowers as large as his bike.

    ย The flowers, that also serve as a motive for the cover of the book, could be seen as a reference to Sudaโ€™s first personal series, โ€œFรปshi Kadenโ€, that literally means โ€œthe transmission of the flower of acting styleโ€ and refers to a theatrical process consisting in the creation of a new apparition through the performing act.ย 

    Black and white portrait of two boys in japan by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Losing ourselves in Sudaโ€™s unusual views of everyday life, framing reality to make it look appealingly unusual, one can only think that he had appropriated the concept to photography and developed it throughout his entire work.

     

    Issei Suda / Editions Chose Commune
    Book available for purchase here.

    All images ยฉ Issei Suda

    Issei Suda: "78" | The Independent Photographer
    Issei Suda

    Book Review Issei Suda: โ€œ78โ€

    ยฉ Issei Suda

    From Tokyo to its surrounding prefectures, a book recently published by Chose Commune reveals the Japanese photography masterโ€™s striking world, immersed in urban energy and a playful observation of people that distill it.


    โ”€โ”€โ”€ by Laurence Cornet, August 1, 2019
  • Daido Moriyamaโ€™s coal-textured photographs bluntly depicting urban life have imprinted a signature on Japanese photography. Joining the magazine Provoke early on, Moriyama has contributed to defining what was by the time considered the new photographic expression, along with many artists of his generation. Yet, the Japanese photography scene is far more complex and diverse, including photographers such as Masahisa Fukase and Issei Suda, both of whom restlessly experimented and documented with their camera.

    Black and white portrait of a young girl in japan by Issei Suda
    Takasaki, Gunma, 1978 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    While Suda died a few months ago, he left with a promise to Cecile Poimboeuf-Koizumi, co-founder of Editions Chose Commune, to publish a book of his lesser-known work. Prolific as he was, his home is sinking under boxes of archives that Poimboeuf-Koizumi carefully explored, putting together a selection that draws a portrait of Tokyo and its surroundings as much as of the photographer himself.

    The result was recently published, with the printing quality that the publisher has gotten us used to, shedding light on Sudaโ€™s mastery of light.

    black and white portrait of an elderly woman walking in Tokyo, Japan. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Asakusa, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Going through the photographs, the focus on movement is striking. Each character captured by Suda seems in the midst of a choreography, both individually and as a group of bodies interacting with each other. An old lady so curved by the years that she seems to curtsy the floor; groups of friends walking in the streets whose bodies are fragmented in independent parts by the light; hair twirled by the wind echoing the comb of feathers of the bird sitting on a womanโ€™s shoulder. Gestures are so vividly expressive they seem posed.

    The sequencing of the book โ€“ titled โ€œ78โ€ as a reference to both the number of photographs it brings together and to the age at which Suda died โ€“ emphasizes this aspect of the photographerโ€™s work. Even static objects like wall paintings, umbrellas, trees, and carts join the dance. No doubt Suda sharpened this subtle skill at the beginning of his career, in 1967, working as a stage photographer and documentarist of the avant-garde theatre group โ€œTenjo Sajiki,โ€ a troupe directed by poet-playwright Terayama Shuji.

    Black and white portrait of three boys in Tokyo, japan by Issei Suda
    Nishinippori, Tokyo, 1979 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Trained on the stages of theater too, Sudaโ€™s eye for costumes is captivating. For many years, he traveled in Japan from festival to festival to document folkloric traditions before they disappear. And when in the street of his own city, he brought the same attention to accessories. In this book, they unravel by touches the scope of Tokyoโ€™s motley social fabric โ€“ the paint-stained jacket of the worker, the silk kimono of the elegant lady, the ruffle dress of the schoolgirl, the apron of the cook, the shorts of the fisherman, the tweed suit of the businessman. Combined with motions, the outfits reveal the true nature of Sudaโ€™s random encounters. Their attitude and surroundings come together to tell a unique story โ€“ they are not stereotypes but individuals in the most intriguing way.

    two women walking in the streets of Japan with a monkey. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Kanuma, Tochigi, 1973 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Despite their precision, never are Sudaโ€™s photographs pretentious. They
    render the ordinary, dotted with a mystery that may as well be the generosity and curiosity of the photographer himself. That hint at extraordinary is what makes Sudaโ€™s photographs so captivating. While they give a sense of an era โ€“ most photographs from the selection were shot in the 1970s in Tokyo and the capitalโ€™s surroundings -, the images crystalize scenes that would otherwise have gone unnoticed, that very moment when patterns and gestures form another image.

    black and white portrait of a woman and a man by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1975 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Carefully rejecting from the frame everything deemed unnecessary and likely to divert from the remarkable essence of his subjects, Suda improvises with the theater of every day. So much so they at times seem playful โ€“ a man chatting at a window, his head covered by the curtain as if hiding; siblings using large leaves as oversized hats; hands passing glasses, cups, and pots as in an illusionist trick; a delivery man with a bouquet of flowers as large as his bike.

     The flowers, that also serve as a motive for the cover of the book, could be seen as a reference to Sudaโ€™s first personal series, โ€œFรปshi Kadenโ€, that literally means โ€œthe transmission of the flower of acting styleโ€ and refers to a theatrical process consisting in the creation of a new apparition through the performing act. 

    Black and white portrait of two boys in japan by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Losing ourselves in Sudaโ€™s unusual views of everyday life, framing reality to make it look appealingly unusual, one can only think that he had appropriated the concept to photography and developed it throughout his entire work.

     

    Issei Suda / Editions Chose Commune
    Book available for purchase here.

    All images ยฉ Issei Suda

    Issei Suda: "78" | The Independent Photographer
    Issei Suda

    Book Review Issei Suda: “78”

    © Issei Suda

    From Tokyo to its surrounding prefectures, a book recently published by Chose Commune reveals the Japanese photography masterโ€™s striking world, immersed in urban energy and a playful observation of people that distill it.


    โ”€โ”€โ”€ by Laurence Cornet, August 1, 2019
  • Daido Moriyamaโ€™s coal-textured photographs bluntly depicting urban life have imprinted a signature on Japanese photography. Joining the magazine Provoke early on, Moriyama has contributed to defining what was by the time considered the new photographic expression, along with many artists of his generation. Yet, the Japanese photography scene is far more complex and diverse, including photographers such as Masahisa Fukase and Issei Suda, both of whom restlessly experimented and documented with their camera.

    Black and white portrait of a young girl in japan by Issei Suda
    Takasaki, Gunma, 1978 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    While Suda died a few months ago, he left with a promise to Cecile Poimboeuf-Koizumi, co-founder of Editions Chose Commune, to publish a book of his lesser-known work. Prolific as he was, his home is sinking under boxes of archives that Poimboeuf-Koizumi carefully explored, putting together a selection that draws a portrait of Tokyo and its surroundings as much as of the photographer himself.

    The result was recently published, with the printing quality that the publisher has gotten us used to, shedding light on Sudaโ€™s mastery of light.

    black and white portrait of an elderly woman walking in Tokyo, Japan. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Asakusa, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Going through the photographs, the focus on movement is striking. Each character captured by Suda seems in the midst of a choreography, both individually and as a group of bodies interacting with each other. An old lady so curved by the years that she seems to curtsy the floor; groups of friends walking in the streets whose bodies are fragmented in independent parts by the light; hair twirled by the wind echoing the comb of feathers of the bird sitting on a womanโ€™s shoulder. Gestures are so vividly expressive they seem posed.

    The sequencing of the book โ€“ titled โ€œ78โ€ as a reference to both the number of photographs it brings together and to the age at which Suda died โ€“ emphasizes this aspect of the photographerโ€™s work. Even static objects like wall paintings, umbrellas, trees, and carts join the dance. No doubt Suda sharpened this subtle skill at the beginning of his career, in 1967, working as a stage photographer and documentarist of the avant-garde theatre group โ€œTenjo Sajiki,โ€ a troupe directed by poet-playwright Terayama Shuji.

    Black and white portrait of three boys in Tokyo, japan by Issei Suda
    Nishinippori, Tokyo, 1979 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Trained on the stages of theater too, Sudaโ€™s eye for costumes is captivating. For many years, he traveled in Japan from festival to festival to document folkloric traditions before they disappear. And when in the street of his own city, he brought the same attention to accessories. In this book, they unravel by touches the scope of Tokyoโ€™s motley social fabric โ€“ the paint-stained jacket of the worker, the silk kimono of the elegant lady, the ruffle dress of the schoolgirl, the apron of the cook, the shorts of the fisherman, the tweed suit of the businessman. Combined with motions, the outfits reveal the true nature of Sudaโ€™s random encounters. Their attitude and surroundings come together to tell a unique story โ€“ they are not stereotypes but individuals in the most intriguing way.

    two women walking in the streets of Japan with a monkey. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Kanuma, Tochigi, 1973 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Despite their precision, never are Sudaโ€™s photographs pretentious. They
    render the ordinary, dotted with a mystery that may as well be the generosity and curiosity of the photographer himself. That hint at extraordinary is what makes Sudaโ€™s photographs so captivating. While they give a sense of an era โ€“ most photographs from the selection were shot in the 1970s in Tokyo and the capitalโ€™s surroundings -, the images crystalize scenes that would otherwise have gone unnoticed, that very moment when patterns and gestures form another image.

    black and white portrait of a woman and a man by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1975 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Carefully rejecting from the frame everything deemed unnecessary and likely to divert from the remarkable essence of his subjects, Suda improvises with the theater of every day. So much so they at times seem playful โ€“ a man chatting at a window, his head covered by the curtain as if hiding; siblings using large leaves as oversized hats; hands passing glasses, cups, and pots as in an illusionist trick; a delivery man with a bouquet of flowers as large as his bike.

    ย The flowers, that also serve as a motive for the cover of the book, could be seen as a reference to Sudaโ€™s first personal series, โ€œFรปshi Kadenโ€, that literally means โ€œthe transmission of the flower of acting styleโ€ and refers to a theatrical process consisting in the creation of a new apparition through the performing act.ย 

    Black and white portrait of two boys in japan by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Losing ourselves in Sudaโ€™s unusual views of everyday life, framing reality to make it look appealingly unusual, one can only think that he had appropriated the concept to photography and developed it throughout his entire work.

     

    Issei Suda / Editions Chose Commune
    Book available for purchase here.

    All images ยฉ Issei Suda

    Issei Suda: "78" | The Independent Photographer
    Issei Suda

    Book Review Issei Suda: โ€œ78โ€

    ยฉ Issei Suda

    From Tokyo to its surrounding prefectures, a book recently published by Chose Commune reveals the Japanese photography masterโ€™s striking world, immersed in urban energy and a playful observation of people that distill it.


    โ”€โ”€โ”€ by Laurence Cornet, August 1, 2019
  • Daido Moriyamaโ€™s coal-textured photographs bluntly depicting urban life have imprinted a signature on Japanese photography. Joining the magazine Provoke early on, Moriyama has contributed to defining what was by the time considered the new photographic expression, along with many artists of his generation. Yet, the Japanese photography scene is far more complex and diverse, including photographers such as Masahisa Fukase and Issei Suda, both of whom restlessly experimented and documented with their camera.

    Black and white portrait of a young girl in japan by Issei Suda
    Takasaki, Gunma, 1978 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    While Suda died a few months ago, he left with a promise to Cecile Poimboeuf-Koizumi, co-founder of Editions Chose Commune, to publish a book of his lesser-known work. Prolific as he was, his home is sinking under boxes of archives that Poimboeuf-Koizumi carefully explored, putting together a selection that draws a portrait of Tokyo and its surroundings as much as of the photographer himself.

    The result was recently published, with the printing quality that the publisher has gotten us used to, shedding light on Sudaโ€™s mastery of light.

    black and white portrait of an elderly woman walking in Tokyo, Japan. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Asakusa, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Going through the photographs, the focus on movement is striking. Each character captured by Suda seems in the midst of a choreography, both individually and as a group of bodies interacting with each other. An old lady so curved by the years that she seems to curtsy the floor; groups of friends walking in the streets whose bodies are fragmented in independent parts by the light; hair twirled by the wind echoing the comb of feathers of the bird sitting on a womanโ€™s shoulder. Gestures are so vividly expressive they seem posed.

    The sequencing of the book โ€“ titled โ€œ78โ€ as a reference to both the number of photographs it brings together and to the age at which Suda died โ€“ emphasizes this aspect of the photographerโ€™s work. Even static objects like wall paintings, umbrellas, trees, and carts join the dance. No doubt Suda sharpened this subtle skill at the beginning of his career, in 1967, working as a stage photographer and documentarist of the avant-garde theatre group โ€œTenjo Sajiki,โ€ a troupe directed by poet-playwright Terayama Shuji.

    Black and white portrait of three boys in Tokyo, japan by Issei Suda
    Nishinippori, Tokyo, 1979 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Trained on the stages of theater too, Sudaโ€™s eye for costumes is captivating. For many years, he traveled in Japan from festival to festival to document folkloric traditions before they disappear. And when in the street of his own city, he brought the same attention to accessories. In this book, they unravel by touches the scope of Tokyoโ€™s motley social fabric โ€“ the paint-stained jacket of the worker, the silk kimono of the elegant lady, the ruffle dress of the schoolgirl, the apron of the cook, the shorts of the fisherman, the tweed suit of the businessman. Combined with motions, the outfits reveal the true nature of Sudaโ€™s random encounters. Their attitude and surroundings come together to tell a unique story โ€“ they are not stereotypes but individuals in the most intriguing way.

    two women walking in the streets of Japan with a monkey. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Kanuma, Tochigi, 1973 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Despite their precision, never are Sudaโ€™s photographs pretentious. They
    render the ordinary, dotted with a mystery that may as well be the generosity and curiosity of the photographer himself. That hint at extraordinary is what makes Sudaโ€™s photographs so captivating. While they give a sense of an era โ€“ most photographs from the selection were shot in the 1970s in Tokyo and the capitalโ€™s surroundings -, the images crystalize scenes that would otherwise have gone unnoticed, that very moment when patterns and gestures form another image.

    black and white portrait of a woman and a man by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1975 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Carefully rejecting from the frame everything deemed unnecessary and likely to divert from the remarkable essence of his subjects, Suda improvises with the theater of every day. So much so they at times seem playful โ€“ a man chatting at a window, his head covered by the curtain as if hiding; siblings using large leaves as oversized hats; hands passing glasses, cups, and pots as in an illusionist trick; a delivery man with a bouquet of flowers as large as his bike.

     The flowers, that also serve as a motive for the cover of the book, could be seen as a reference to Sudaโ€™s first personal series, โ€œFรปshi Kadenโ€, that literally means โ€œthe transmission of the flower of acting styleโ€ and refers to a theatrical process consisting in the creation of a new apparition through the performing act. 

    Black and white portrait of two boys in japan by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Losing ourselves in Sudaโ€™s unusual views of everyday life, framing reality to make it look appealingly unusual, one can only think that he had appropriated the concept to photography and developed it throughout his entire work.

     

    Issei Suda / Editions Chose Commune
    Book available for purchase here.

    All images ยฉ Issei Suda

    Issei Suda: "78" | The Independent Photographer
    Issei Suda

    Book Review Issei Suda: “78”

    © Issei Suda

    From Tokyo to its surrounding prefectures, a book recently published by Chose Commune reveals the Japanese photography masterโ€™s striking world, immersed in urban energy and a playful observation of people that distill it.


    โ”€โ”€โ”€ by Laurence Cornet, August 1, 2019
  • Daido Moriyamaโ€™s coal-textured photographs bluntly depicting urban life have imprinted a signature on Japanese photography. Joining the magazine Provoke early on, Moriyama has contributed to defining what was by the time considered the new photographic expression, along with many artists of his generation. Yet, the Japanese photography scene is far more complex and diverse, including photographers such as Masahisa Fukase and Issei Suda, both of whom restlessly experimented and documented with their camera.

    Black and white portrait of a young girl in japan by Issei Suda
    Takasaki, Gunma, 1978 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    While Suda died a few months ago, he left with a promise to Cecile Poimboeuf-Koizumi, co-founder of Editions Chose Commune, to publish a book of his lesser-known work. Prolific as he was, his home is sinking under boxes of archives that Poimboeuf-Koizumi carefully explored, putting together a selection that draws a portrait of Tokyo and its surroundings as much as of the photographer himself.

    The result was recently published, with the printing quality that the publisher has gotten us used to, shedding light on Sudaโ€™s mastery of light.

    black and white portrait of an elderly woman walking in Tokyo, Japan. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Asakusa, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Going through the photographs, the focus on movement is striking. Each character captured by Suda seems in the midst of a choreography, both individually and as a group of bodies interacting with each other. An old lady so curved by the years that she seems to curtsy the floor; groups of friends walking in the streets whose bodies are fragmented in independent parts by the light; hair twirled by the wind echoing the comb of feathers of the bird sitting on a womanโ€™s shoulder. Gestures are so vividly expressive they seem posed.

    The sequencing of the book โ€“ titled โ€œ78โ€ as a reference to both the number of photographs it brings together and to the age at which Suda died โ€“ emphasizes this aspect of the photographerโ€™s work. Even static objects like wall paintings, umbrellas, trees, and carts join the dance. No doubt Suda sharpened this subtle skill at the beginning of his career, in 1967, working as a stage photographer and documentarist of the avant-garde theatre group โ€œTenjo Sajiki,โ€ a troupe directed by poet-playwright Terayama Shuji.

    Black and white portrait of three boys in Tokyo, japan by Issei Suda
    Nishinippori, Tokyo, 1979 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Trained on the stages of theater too, Sudaโ€™s eye for costumes is captivating. For many years, he traveled in Japan from festival to festival to document folkloric traditions before they disappear. And when in the street of his own city, he brought the same attention to accessories. In this book, they unravel by touches the scope of Tokyoโ€™s motley social fabric โ€“ the paint-stained jacket of the worker, the silk kimono of the elegant lady, the ruffle dress of the schoolgirl, the apron of the cook, the shorts of the fisherman, the tweed suit of the businessman. Combined with motions, the outfits reveal the true nature of Sudaโ€™s random encounters. Their attitude and surroundings come together to tell a unique story โ€“ they are not stereotypes but individuals in the most intriguing way.

    two women walking in the streets of Japan with a monkey. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Kanuma, Tochigi, 1973 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Despite their precision, never are Sudaโ€™s photographs pretentious. They
    render the ordinary, dotted with a mystery that may as well be the generosity and curiosity of the photographer himself. That hint at extraordinary is what makes Sudaโ€™s photographs so captivating. While they give a sense of an era โ€“ most photographs from the selection were shot in the 1970s in Tokyo and the capitalโ€™s surroundings -, the images crystalize scenes that would otherwise have gone unnoticed, that very moment when patterns and gestures form another image.

    black and white portrait of a woman and a man by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1975 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Carefully rejecting from the frame everything deemed unnecessary and likely to divert from the remarkable essence of his subjects, Suda improvises with the theater of every day. So much so they at times seem playful โ€“ a man chatting at a window, his head covered by the curtain as if hiding; siblings using large leaves as oversized hats; hands passing glasses, cups, and pots as in an illusionist trick; a delivery man with a bouquet of flowers as large as his bike.

    ย The flowers, that also serve as a motive for the cover of the book, could be seen as a reference to Sudaโ€™s first personal series, โ€œFรปshi Kadenโ€, that literally means โ€œthe transmission of the flower of acting styleโ€ and refers to a theatrical process consisting in the creation of a new apparition through the performing act.ย 

    Black and white portrait of two boys in japan by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Losing ourselves in Sudaโ€™s unusual views of everyday life, framing reality to make it look appealingly unusual, one can only think that he had appropriated the concept to photography and developed it throughout his entire work.

     

    Issei Suda / Editions Chose Commune
    Book available for purchase here.

    All images ยฉ Issei Suda

    Issei Suda: "78" | The Independent Photographer
    Issei Suda

    Book Review Issei Suda: โ€œ78โ€

    ยฉ Issei Suda

    From Tokyo to its surrounding prefectures, a book recently published by Chose Commune reveals the Japanese photography masterโ€™s striking world, immersed in urban energy and a playful observation of people that distill it.


    โ”€โ”€โ”€ by Laurence Cornet, August 1, 2019
  • Daido Moriyamaโ€™s coal-textured photographs bluntly depicting urban life have imprinted a signature on Japanese photography. Joining the magazine Provoke early on, Moriyama has contributed to defining what was by the time considered the new photographic expression, along with many artists of his generation. Yet, the Japanese photography scene is far more complex and diverse, including photographers such as Masahisa Fukase and Issei Suda, both of whom restlessly experimented and documented with their camera.

    Black and white portrait of a young girl in japan by Issei Suda
    Takasaki, Gunma, 1978 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    While Suda died a few months ago, he left with a promise to Cecile Poimboeuf-Koizumi, co-founder of Editions Chose Commune, to publish a book of his lesser-known work. Prolific as he was, his home is sinking under boxes of archives that Poimboeuf-Koizumi carefully explored, putting together a selection that draws a portrait of Tokyo and its surroundings as much as of the photographer himself.

    The result was recently published, with the printing quality that the publisher has gotten us used to, shedding light on Sudaโ€™s mastery of light.

    black and white portrait of an elderly woman walking in Tokyo, Japan. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Asakusa, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Going through the photographs, the focus on movement is striking. Each character captured by Suda seems in the midst of a choreography, both individually and as a group of bodies interacting with each other. An old lady so curved by the years that she seems to curtsy the floor; groups of friends walking in the streets whose bodies are fragmented in independent parts by the light; hair twirled by the wind echoing the comb of feathers of the bird sitting on a womanโ€™s shoulder. Gestures are so vividly expressive they seem posed.

    The sequencing of the book โ€“ titled โ€œ78โ€ as a reference to both the number of photographs it brings together and to the age at which Suda died โ€“ emphasizes this aspect of the photographerโ€™s work. Even static objects like wall paintings, umbrellas, trees, and carts join the dance. No doubt Suda sharpened this subtle skill at the beginning of his career, in 1967, working as a stage photographer and documentarist of the avant-garde theatre group โ€œTenjo Sajiki,โ€ a troupe directed by poet-playwright Terayama Shuji.

    Black and white portrait of three boys in Tokyo, japan by Issei Suda
    Nishinippori, Tokyo, 1979 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Trained on the stages of theater too, Sudaโ€™s eye for costumes is captivating. For many years, he traveled in Japan from festival to festival to document folkloric traditions before they disappear. And when in the street of his own city, he brought the same attention to accessories. In this book, they unravel by touches the scope of Tokyoโ€™s motley social fabric โ€“ the paint-stained jacket of the worker, the silk kimono of the elegant lady, the ruffle dress of the schoolgirl, the apron of the cook, the shorts of the fisherman, the tweed suit of the businessman. Combined with motions, the outfits reveal the true nature of Sudaโ€™s random encounters. Their attitude and surroundings come together to tell a unique story โ€“ they are not stereotypes but individuals in the most intriguing way.

    two women walking in the streets of Japan with a monkey. Photograph by Issei Suda
    Kanuma, Tochigi, 1973 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Despite their precision, never are Sudaโ€™s photographs pretentious. They
    render the ordinary, dotted with a mystery that may as well be the generosity and curiosity of the photographer himself. That hint at extraordinary is what makes Sudaโ€™s photographs so captivating. While they give a sense of an era โ€“ most photographs from the selection were shot in the 1970s in Tokyo and the capitalโ€™s surroundings -, the images crystalize scenes that would otherwise have gone unnoticed, that very moment when patterns and gestures form another image.

    black and white portrait of a woman and a man by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1975 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Carefully rejecting from the frame everything deemed unnecessary and likely to divert from the remarkable essence of his subjects, Suda improvises with the theater of every day. So much so they at times seem playful โ€“ a man chatting at a window, his head covered by the curtain as if hiding; siblings using large leaves as oversized hats; hands passing glasses, cups, and pots as in an illusionist trick; a delivery man with a bouquet of flowers as large as his bike.

     The flowers, that also serve as a motive for the cover of the book, could be seen as a reference to Sudaโ€™s first personal series, โ€œFรปshi Kadenโ€, that literally means โ€œthe transmission of the flower of acting styleโ€ and refers to a theatrical process consisting in the creation of a new apparition through the performing act. 

    Black and white portrait of two boys in japan by Issei Suda
    Ueno, Tokyo, 1974 ยฉ Issei Suda Works/Chose Commune


    Losing ourselves in Sudaโ€™s unusual views of everyday life, framing reality to make it look appealingly unusual, one can only think that he had appropriated the concept to photography and developed it throughout his entire work.

     

    Issei Suda / Editions Chose Commune
    Book available for purchase here.

    All images ยฉ Issei Suda