Sukita : Eternity – Signed, David Bowie ‘Heroes Outtake’ Edition (Numbers 26-100)

£500.00

BEGINS SHIPPING 30TH JUNE 2021

Includes an 8×10 inch print, signed by Masayoshi Sukita
Book signed and numbered by Masayoshi Sukita, presented in a slipcase

  • The first full retrospective from Masayoshi Sukita: a legend in the world of music, film and celebrity photography
  • The master photographer of David Bowie’s Heroes, of Jim Jarmusch’s cult film Mystery Train, and of iconic photos of Iggy Pop and Marc Bolan
  • Includes Sukita’s greatest images; early work, fashion, music, film and street and travel imagery
  • This edition comes with a David Bowie portrait, taken in 1977, an outtake from the Heroes album cover session, signed by Sukita along with the signed and numbered book, presented in a slipcase

Size 325 mm x 250 mm
Pages 256 Pages

SKU: Sukita-Heroes-Outtake-Edition Category: Tag:

Description

“It’s very hard for me to accept that Sukita-san has been snapping away at me since 1972, but that really is the case. I suspect that it’s because whenever he’s asked me to do a session, I conjure up in my mind’s eye the sweet, creative and big-hearted man who has always made these potentially tedious affairs so relaxed and painless. May he click into eternity.” – David Bowie

For Sukita, the creative mastermind behind the iconic cover for David Bowie’s album ‘Heroes’, photography is an expression of a ‘fundamental secret’ shared between artists: a spiritual communication that transcends the minutiae of language. Born and raised in Kyushu, Japan, Sukita’s reverence of American and Western counter-culture lured him to New York and London. He immersed himself in the western music scene which he loved, while his relaxed photo sessions endeared him to many celebrity figures, including David Bowie and Iggy Pop (with both of whom Sukita had a 40-year long professional relationship), Marc Bolan, and Japanese musician Hotei, best known for his work on the Kill Bill soundtrack. His work spans the early US and UK seventies rock scene, the London punk-rock era to the present crop of emerging Japanese rock artists.

This photo book is the first time the photographer has collaborated on a major retrospective of his career and includes some of his early documentary work and his rarely-seen travel and street photography. It introduces the artist through two essays that explore his place within the wider context of both Western and Japanese photography, presented alongside the many iconic shots of both Western and Japanese artists that earned him his eternal reputation.