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INSIDE JAPAN, THE NIPPONESE NATION BEYOND CLICHÉS

If there's one fantasy country that the Western eye tends to perceive only through clichés, it's Japan. Photographer Roberto Badin has set out to break down these clichés with Inside Japan, a unique book that takes us to the heart of Japanese cities, to capture all the subtleties and contrasts of this land.

 Why Japan? Because during his childhood in Brazil, little Roberto was immersed in cartoons from the Land of the Rising Sun: "Japan was like a distant planet. I dreamed of going there, just as you dream of walking on Jupiter or Mars. My relationship with the Japanese people has always been very sensory. One of my first works as a photographer was commissioned by Kenzo Takada. Perhaps, without realizing it, it was decisive for the rest of my career."

Forget the effervescent, light-filled megalopolis that lives at 200 an hour. Instead, the artist focuses on contemporary architecture, everyday life and solitude, using structured, graphic framing around deliberately isolated silhouettes. A way of questioning the relationship between the human being and the environment. Published by Editions Benjamin Blanck, this handsome book contains several singular scenes: a teenage girl enclosed in a frame of light, two yakuza silhouettes at the heart of a sublime composition, a young woman hidden and at the same time highlighted by her immaculate umbrella against a backdrop of grey concrete. These are stories brimming with beauty. To be discovered as a matter of urgency.

Inside Japan by Roberto Badin

Éditions Benjamin Blanck

39,95 €

robertobadin.com

instagram.com/robertobadin

Lisa Agostini

France - Paris