Majestic book. Collects monochromatic, wintry nature pictures of Japan, using clean lines and panoramic views to transport the viewer to a place of stillness, calm and awe. Accompanied by evocative haikus.
One of the top 3 photography books I have read. Kenna's photography is amazing. It's easy to see how he loves to shoot in Japan, with his graphic images presenting the viewer with a spiritual minimalism that is so much a large part of the Japanese culture. The layout really excels at presenting the images and print quality is adequate.
Highly recommended to anyone who has a passion for B&W photography
The combination of images and text throughout the collection invite long langorous contemplation of the artistry assembled and the mystery and enchantment that each page offers. Beautiful.
One of my fav fine art photographers! Crying because his work feels so zen and beautiful. I often flip through the pages when I am down to remind myself the beauty of living
This beautiful book presents a collection of 240 black and white photographs by renowned photographer Michael Kenna taken over a period of 30 years from his travels to and throughout Japan. Kenna’s compositions emphasise the provocative power of natural forms combined with the pervading influence of Zen philosophy in the Far East. Expansiveness and emptiness coexist. Thus: a placid coastline; Mt Fuji presiding over a snowy expanse; mist-filled landscapes of hunched shrubs; a torii gate emerging from a sea of clouds; stalwart yet forgotten Bodhisattvas.
Divided between seven chapters (First, Sea, Land, Trees, Spirit, Sky, Last), the book’s few words are introspective essays that open each chapter and classic haiku interspersed throughout. Simultaneously contemplative and evocative, Forms of Japan is a rich meditation on simplicity and form.
Gorgeous collection of black & white photographs of Japan, accompanied by traditional haiku. The photographs by Michael Kenna and the book design & commentary by Yvonne Meyer-Lohr beautifully convey the simplicity and spirituality of the Japanese aesthetic. I’d recommend this coffee table book to fans of black & white nature photography, Japanese art or Zen Buddhism.