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Seller's Description:
Very good. Connecting readers with great books since 1972! Used books may not include companion materials, and may have some shelf wear or limited writing. We ship orders daily and Customer Service is our top priority!
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Seller's Description:
Very Good. Pap, dj. In acetate cover. Jacket spine torn at head and tail; scotch tape covering tear at head. Some creasing to wraps. Else fine. A sound copy with bright, clean internals. Very Good.
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Seller's Description:
Very Good. Trade PB. 4to. Tsukiji Shokan Publishing Co. 1970. First Edition/First Printing. Unpaginated approximately 500 pgs. Wrappers lightly worn to the extremities with some light creasing present to the spine. Book is free of ownership marks. Text is clean and free of marks. Binding tight and solid. Illustrated with full-page reproductions of Ohara's close-up portraits. Ken Ohara (1942) is a Japanese photographer. Ohara is most noted for his series of photographs titled One, in which he presents faces with a standard size and tone. Ohara moved from Tokyo to New York City in 1962, and came to public attention in 1970 with the publication of One, which contained more than 500 tight close-ups of faces. In the 30 years since then, Ohara has continued his portrait studies in greatly varied forms E-133; 4to 11"-13" tall.
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Seller's Description:
Just about fine in photo-illustrated wrappers in an equally fine price-clipped jacket. First Edition. Thick quarto. SIGNED by Ohara to first page, with his trademark signature-line extending over the textblock edge, and across the final two pages of portraits. A fully-illustrated collection of 500 black-and-white portraits captured on the streets of New York, where the Japanese-born photographer was an apprentice to Richard Avedon and Hiro. Printing the portraits with the same tonal quality, and thus blurring differences in skin color, "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, v1, 291).