HOSOE, EIKOH [PHOTOGRAPHER] Flowers of Evil. Les Fleurs du Mal. Poems by Charles Baudelaire translated from the French & with an introduction by John Wood. Photographs and an Afterword by Eikoh Hosoe. South Dennis, Massachusetts: Steven Albahari, 21st Editions, printed by Michael Russem and Mollie Zanoni at the Kat Ran Press, [2006] Square folio (18 x 15 in.; 457 x 381 mm). 11 platinum prints signed by Hosoe (10 tipped into the book onto hand-made black paper, 1 free-standing within the publisher's folder), printed by Stan Klimek for Eikoh Hosoe, composed in Monotype Walbaum by Michael & Winifred Bixler. Black leather-backed matte black anodized aluminum boards, with Japanese title printed in glossy black on the upper cover, designed and bound by Peter Geraty at the Praxis Bindery. Publisher's red silk covered box. One of sixty-five numbered copies signed by the artist, editor and publisher Eikoh Hosoe is a Japanese photographer and filmmaker, known for his psychologically charged images, which often explore the themes of erotic obsession and death. Baudelaire—a great influence on Hosoe—was preoccupied with just these subjects in his Les Fleurs du Mal, making the verse ideal for such artistic reinterpretation.
HOSOE, EIKOH [PHOTOGRAPHER] Flowers of Evil. Les Fleurs du Mal. Poems by Charles Baudelaire translated from the French & with an introduction by John Wood. Photographs and an Afterword by Eikoh Hosoe. South Dennis, Massachusetts: Steven Albahari, 21st Editions, printed by Michael Russem and Mollie Zanoni at the Kat Ran Press, [2006] Square folio (18 x 15 in.; 457 x 381 mm). 11 platinum prints signed by Hosoe (10 tipped into the book onto hand-made black paper, 1 free-standing within the publisher's folder), printed by Stan Klimek for Eikoh Hosoe, composed in Monotype Walbaum by Michael & Winifred Bixler. Black leather-backed matte black anodized aluminum boards, with Japanese title printed in glossy black on the upper cover, designed and bound by Peter Geraty at the Praxis Bindery. Publisher's red silk covered box. One of sixty-five numbered copies signed by the artist, editor and publisher Eikoh Hosoe is a Japanese photographer and filmmaker, known for his psychologically charged images, which often explore the themes of erotic obsession and death. Baudelaire—a great influence on Hosoe—was preoccupied with just these subjects in his Les Fleurs du Mal, making the verse ideal for such artistic reinterpretation.
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