Language: English
Published by Galleria Rizzardi, Milano, 1974
Signed
Soft cover. Condition: Fine. Octavo-size portfolio containing 12 pages with poetry and illustrations on the right-hand page. Printed wrappers. - First edition. One of 60 copies, numbered I LX, signed by the authors and illustrators, plus 5 original numbered and signed etchings, printed by Giorgio Upiglio. Signed by Illustrator(s).
Published by Photographer's gallery, TOKYO, 2003
Seller: 246 Books, Seattle, WA, U.S.A.
Signed
Paperback in slipcase. Condition: Fine. KEIZO KITAJIMA: PORTRAITS+PLACES (Signed) two thin volumes of 30+ photos each housed on a paper slipcase which the photographer has signed. 10 5/8" x 9 1/2". Each volume is glossy paper with stiff cover. Fine condition.
Seller: Antiquariaat Digitalis, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Signed
Soft cover. Condition: Good. Softcover, 141p, illustrations (chiefly in color), 20x20 cm. Good/very good, age-toning, light shelf-wear wrappers. Text in Chinese. Inscribed by Author(s).
Published by PPP Editions, New York, 2009
Seller: Vincent Borrelli, Bookseller, Albuquerque, NM, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Soft cover. Condition: New. 1st Edition. First edition, first printing. Limited edition of 250 copies, signed and numbered in silver ink by Kitajima on a black label tipped in the inside rear cover. Soft cover. Photographically illustrated stiff folio (silkscreened) containing sewn-in, illustrated newsprint pages. Photographs and text (in English and Japanese) by Keizo Kitajima. Unpaginated (36 pp.), with black-and-white plates throughout. 16-3/4 x 12 inches. Published on the occasion of an exhibition at Andrew Roth Gallery, New York. New in publisher's packaging. From an interview with Andrew Roth (July 16, 2010): "Back To Okinawa 1980/2009 is a new version of Keizo Kitajima's serialized, four-volume publication Photo Express Okinawa (1980). The original self-published, serialized edition was scheduled for release every other month, over one year, though only four volumes were realized. Together these four volumes formed one work -- an investigation into the nightlife in Kozu, the red-light district surrounding the Kadena Airforce Base in Okinawa. Kitajima immersed himself in the life of Okinawa's nightclubs, bars and streets, photographing a mix of American military (chiefly African-Americans), Japanese prostitutes and drag queens. The volumes were slim zine-like publications with colorful covers and a graphically-dynamic presentation of black-and-white photographs within. Kitajima had lost the negatives for this work so we needed to scan each image from the original four volumes. Since they were printed in half-tone, the dot pattern became even more apparent after scanning them. It seemed logical not to try and make high quality reproductions from them; they would never have held up. Newsprint offset-printing seemed suitable and again, I wanted to reference Moriyama's title. Moriyama was an important early influence on Kitajima." From the publisher: "In 1980, Keizo Kitajima, a recent student from Daido Moriyama's 'Workshop,' photographed the nightlife in Okinawa. He preferred the clubs and bars in Koza, the 'red light district,' situated near Kadena, the American Air Force Base. Koza was a hub for American military throughout the 1950s (it flourished during the Vietnam War and no longer exists), although Okinawa and its citizens are still deeply impacted by the American military presence. In the tradition of Watanabe Katsumi, Kitajima made his living by selling photographs to his subjects. It was most profitable for him on paydays. As there were few galleries for photographic exhibitions in Japan, Kitajima planned to self-publish the photographs he made in 1980 as Photo Express Okinawa, a bi-monthly periodical; he realized merely 4 volumes. Each volume concentrates on a specific time frame during a single month (ie: January 1-15), much like a visual diary. The publication resembled Moriyama's Kiroku [Record] (1972-73) that was also self-published: thin volumes with multiple image-bleeds throughout, including the front and back covers. There are no surviving photographs or negatives from this body of work. The images . were generated by scanning the material from the rare, original volumes. Back to Okinawa affords us the opportunity to view this material fresh. Ten silkscreens were issued and every image from the four volumes was re-edited into the new publication. Kitajima has added a short text, translated into English, which illuminates his development as a young photographer and his experience in Okinawa. He states: 'Affection, hatred, rejection, acceptance: everything was there in Okinawa and nothing was a given. I wanted to make photographs that transcended all that . My generation was profoundly impacted by America. It is impossible to objectify my feelings about it.'" Signed by Author.
Published by Paroru-sha, Tokyo, 1979
Seller: Vincent Borrelli, Bookseller, Albuquerque, NM, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Soft cover. Condition: Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. First edition, first printing (with black obi). Signed in black marker on the first page by Kitajima. Soft cover. Printed wrappers; with photographically illustrated dust jacket and 3-inch obi. Photographs by Keizo Kitajima. Text in Japanese. Includes a bound, folded poster with text and illustrations on one side and a large, two-color reproduction on the other side. Unpaginated (156 pp.), with black-and-white and four-color plates throughout. [Cited in Martin Parr and Gerry Badger, The Photobook: A History, Volume III. (London and New York: Phaidon, 2014), and in Ryuichi Kaneko and Ivan Vartanian, Japanese Photobooks of the 1960s and '70s. (New York: Aperture, 2009).]. Fine in Near Fine dust jacket and obi (light crumpling to the crown of the jacket spine and slight wear to the extremities of the obi, else Fine). A fascinating and quintessentially Provoke-style glimpse of the pop cultural mecca that is Tokyo's Shinjuku district. From Parr and Badger: "The combination of black and white with colour is interesting, because this is a difficult trick to pull off. The tension between Kitajima's flamboyant, contrasty, edgy monochrome and his matter-of-fact, understated colour makes this one of the most distinctive books in the wide bibliography on Shinjuku nightlife." Signed by Author.
Language: Japanese
Published by Kawade Shobo Shinsha, Tokyo, 1991
ISBN 10: 4309261485 ISBN 13: 9784309261485
Seller: Vincent Borrelli, Bookseller, Albuquerque, NM, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. First edition, first printing. Signed in black ink on the half-title page by Kitajima. Hardcover. Printed white paper-covered boards; with matching dust jacket (missing obi). Photographs by Keizo Kitajima. Essays (in Japanese and English) by Yasuo Kobayashi and Toshiharu Ito. 160 pp., with four-color and black-and-white plates. 10-1/2 x 11-7/8 inches. [Cited in Martin Parr and Gerry Badger, The Photobook: A History, Volume II. (London and New York: Phaidon, 2006).]. Near Fine (moderate foxing and shelfwear) in Near Fine dust jacket (stray surface marks and indentations; missing obi). Signed by Author.