$45.66
- Softcover(hand-sewn)
- 48 Pages
- 40 b/w images
- 221 × 230 mm
- limited edition of 1000
- ISBN 9784908512568
- 2022
Until a few years ago, before the Covid-19 pandemic, I would have instantly stepped away from people walking towards me wearing black face masks because I thought they looked suspicious. Since wearing masks has now become an ordinary routine, those wearing black masks appear to me as stylish people who are fashionably coordinating their masks with their clothing. It is incredible how much our habit of wearing masks has changed perceptions. To me now, people wearing masks look as beautiful as never before because their eyes seem to shine all the more brightly, and with a strong willingness. While it is also true that some people put on make-up only around the eyes, they strive to express their feelings just with their eyes. As the saying "the apple of one's eyes" implies, such eyes are captivating. There are people who feel more comfortable wearing masks as well. Among them, many ones want to wear masks even after the pandemic subsides. In Western countries, a dominant opinion is that people want to take off masks as soon as possible because it is hard to read the feelings of others. This certainly makes sense because quite a few people in Japan, too, worry about the relationship between young children and their carers screened by masks. Nonetheless, a face mask is an important item to save human beings from the Covid disaster.
While many photographs included in this book were taken in Tokyo, there are some photographed in other places such as Fukuoka and Fukushima, and so I should have titled the book "Japanese Eyes." However, I dared to title it Tokyo Eyes. Apples of eyes, love, and cues from Japan to the world. What do we have to learn from now on and what will save human beings?