Go

First edition of Go by Bruce Gilden. First impression. Medium format hardback in fine condition. Signed with a personalised inscription to Chris Steele-Perkins, by the artist, on the title page. Numbered 478/3000.

About

Named for one of the most intellectually challenging board games in the world, played primarily in China, Japan, and Korea by players who use black and white stones to acquire territory, Go presents Bruce Gilden's photographic explorations of the darker side of Japan. In striking, full-page, black-and-white images, Gilden documents the brutal reality of a Japanese street. In-your-face pictures of Yakuza (mobsters), Bosozoku (members of biker gangs), and street people characters who are alternately intimidating, bloodied, tattooed, frightening, and disheveled are sporadically interspersed with manga cartoons for a revelatory glimpse at a Japan that looks nothing like its familiar image of calm, orderly, hyper-efficient perfection.

$117.43

Original: $335.51

-65%
Go

$335.51

$117.43
Product image 1
Product image 2
Product image 3
Product image 4
Product image 5
Product image 6
Product image 7
Product image 8

Description

First edition of Go by Bruce Gilden. First impression. Medium format hardback in fine condition. Signed with a personalised inscription to Chris Steele-Perkins, by the artist, on the title page. Numbered 478/3000.

About

Named for one of the most intellectually challenging board games in the world, played primarily in China, Japan, and Korea by players who use black and white stones to acquire territory, Go presents Bruce Gilden's photographic explorations of the darker side of Japan. In striking, full-page, black-and-white images, Gilden documents the brutal reality of a Japanese street. In-your-face pictures of Yakuza (mobsters), Bosozoku (members of biker gangs), and street people characters who are alternately intimidating, bloodied, tattooed, frightening, and disheveled are sporadically interspersed with manga cartoons for a revelatory glimpse at a Japan that looks nothing like its familiar image of calm, orderly, hyper-efficient perfection.

Go | Setanta Books