Max Zerrahn: Snake Legs 蛇足

26,00 

144 pages, 100 images,
142 x 190 mm,
Softcover
© 2020 White Belt Publishing / Max Zerrahn
ISBN 978-3-00-064629-4

Description

In Chris Marker’s film „Sans Soleil“ from 1983, a female narrator reads from letters supposedly sent to her by the (fictitious) cameraman Sandor Krasna. He writes: “I’ve been round the world several times and now only banality still interests me.“

The title of Max Zerrahn’s first photo-book stems from the Japanese proverb which describes the redundancy of Snake Legs and translates it to everyday situations.

His photographs, all of which were taken in Japan, many in Tokyo, show us intimate and vivid details, the types of scenes that would typically go unnoticed in the rush of a city of 38 million inhabitants. Instead of Tokyo-neon-pop-clichés, the sequence of images floats between a sense of calmness, subtle irritations and a curious joy for the quirkiness of urban detail. An owl without a face, a plastic eye dropped by the curb, a ladder floating in the sky.