Purple Magazine
— F/W 2012 issue 18

Close Your Eyes

by DAIDO MORIYAMA   Born in 1938 in Osaka, the cult photographer Daido Moriyama originally studied graphic design. He moved to Tokyo in 1961, where he became the assistant of Eikoh Hosoe, the most important post-World War II photographer in Japan. At the end of the ’60s, he became part of the Japanese photographic avant-garde alongside Takuma Nakahira, who showed together in the experimental magazine and group called Provoke. Later, he began to be recognized for his grainy black-and-white pictures of city life. The streets of Shinjuku — his favorite neighborhood — were his subject. The photographs of William Klein, the writing of Jack Kerouac, and the early paintings of Andy Warhol inspired his style. Moriyama’s black-and-white photographs often explore subjects such as death, erotic obsession, and irrationality. Recently, he started to explore the potential of color in his photography, moving from death, fear, and desolation, to a lighter and…

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