One

Tokyo: Tsukiji Shokan, 1970.
Condition: Nr Fine Light handling complete with DJ.
Softcover
First Edition
500 pp , 275 x 222 mm

First edition of Ohara's seminal project. In 1970 Ken Ohara created a body of work called "One" for which he randomly selected people on the streets of New York and asked if he could take their picture. The resulting full-face portraits are larger than life, close-cropped black-and-white photographs that are as striking as they are unsettling. While working in New York with Richard Avedon and Hiro, Japanese photographer Ken Ohara reconfigured the art of portraiture when he made an "obsessive recording of tightly framed single faces snapped on the streets of New York… and printed them with the same tonal characteristics, thus eliminating differences in skin colour. Through this, and through tight framing that locates the eyes, nose and mouth in the same position on each full-page bleed, he dispenses with the main racial differences. Other specific physiognomic characteristics that we think of as defining racial groups, such as slanting eyes, broad noses, or thin lips, turn out in Ohara's compendium not to be nearly as important as the colour of the skin. Thus Ohara has taken the utopian step of using the camera to turn humankind into one big melting pot, his serial photographs making almost ritual atonement for the sin of racism" (Parr & Badger I:291). In 1974 Ohara won a Guggenheim Fellowship and his work was featured in the "New Japanese Photography" exhibit at MoMA. Item #25174

Price: $1,500.00


One. Hiro Ken Ohara, text.
One. Hiro Ken Ohara, text.