Taki, Koji; Takanashi, Yutaka; Nakahira, Takuma; Moriyama, Daido
Provoke. Shiso no tame no chohatsuteki shiryo (Provoke. Provocative Documents for Thought) Nos. 1 - 3. [Together with:] Mazu tashikarashisa no sekai o sutero (First Abandon the World of Pseudo-Certainty)] [Provoke 4 & 5], 1968 - 1970
10032-BK
Tokyo: Provoke-sha & Tabata Shoten.
Complete set
Provoke 1: 21 x 21cm; 8 ¼ x 8 ¼ inches. Published on November 1, 1968, in an edition of 1000 copies. With halftone reproductions of photographs by Nakahira, Takanashi, and Taki, with texts by Okada Takahiko and Taki. Original white wrappers, with title printed in black on front cover.
Provoke 2: 24 x 18.5 cm; 9 ½ x 7 ¼ inches. Published on March 10, 1969 in an edition of 1000 copies. With halftone reproductions of photographs by Moriyama, Nakahira, Takanashi, and Taki, with a text by Okada. Original grey wrappers, with title printed in black. With printed yellow bellyband, publicizing that this issue has Eros as its theme.
Provoke 3: 23.5 x 18.5 cm; 9 ¼ x 7 ¼ inches. Published on August 10, 1969 in an edition of 1000 copies. With halftone reproductions of photographs by Moriyama, Nakahira, Takanashi, and Taki, with texts by Okada and Yoshimasu Gozo. Original red wrappers, with title printed in black.
Provoke 4 & 5: 20.3 x 14.6 cm; 8 x 5 ¾ inches. Published by Tabata Shoten, Tokyo, on March 31, 1970. With halftone reproductions of photographs by Moriyama, Nakahira, Takanashi, and Taki, with texts by Amano Michie, Nakahira, Okada and Taki. Original photographically illustrated wrappers with matching dust jacket.
Begun in November 1968 by an avant-garde collective of writers and photographers, which included Koji Taki, Takuma Nakahira, Takahiko Okada, Yutaka Takanashi, and Daido Moriyama (who joined with the 2nd issue), Provoke magazine, subtitled Shiso no tame no chohatsuteki shiryo (Provocative Documents for Thought), was a radical revision of the prevailing photographic conventions. Lasting just three issues, the magazine culminated after a year and a half with Mazu tashikarashisa no sekai o sutero (First Abandon the World of Pseudo-Certainty), a book often referred to as Provoke 4 and 5.
The first issue begins with the Provoke Manifesto, signed by the four founders and describing the alienation of language and reality, and identifying photography as the one medium that was capable of conveying this reality:
“Today, when words have lost their material base—in other words, their reality—and seem suspended in mid-air, a photographer’s eye can capture fragments of reality that cannot be expressed in language as it is. He can submit those images as documents to be considered alongside language and ideology. This is why, brash as it may seem, Provoke has the subtitle ‘provocative documents of thought’.â€
Provoke magazine championed a photographic style called “are-bure-bokâ€. This “rough, blurry and out-of-focus†approach mirrored the countercultural spirit of 1960s Japan when the country was a hotbed of public protest. The magazine’s visceral aesthetic played a massive role in changing the face of post-war Japanese photography. Provoke’s grainy, black and white images trashed the glossy appeal of commercial photography and “objective†precision of European-style photojournalism. Offering brash views, abrupt framing and angled perspectives, its photographs were often taken without even looking through the viewfinder. But the magazine reveled in the inky materiality of the darkroom process, printing images across full-bleed spreads, interspersed with terse text and dynamic typography.
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