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Iroha - Kazuo Kitai

Iroha - Kazuo Kitai

In this new series, Kazuo Kitai revisits his own photographic archives: faces, bodies under tension, marching crowds, fragments of resistance. Known for documenting the protest movements in Japan during the 1960s, he now chooses to reactivate these images through a radical gesture.

By tearing his silver prints and covering them with paint, Kitai transforms photography into raw material. The documentary becomes abstraction; the image becomes a surface for a hybrid form, somewhere between calligraphy and painting. This work marks a break in his practice: it is no longer about bearing witness, but about reinterpretation.

In these black-and-white photographs, we see helmeted men, workers, police officers, students, inhabited streets, and suspended objects. The artist overlays them with vivid colors and inscribes the Japanese characters “I,” “RO,” and “HA” — the first syllables of the traditional kana order, the equivalent of the “A-B-C” or “B.A.-BA” in Latin script. A return to fundamentals, further emphasized by the numbers “1, 2, 3,” typically recited as a countdown before setting something in motion.

A manifesto in book form — at the intersection of memory, painterly gesture, and renewal.

$19.37

Original: $55.34

-65%
Iroha - Kazuo Kitai—

$55.34

$19.37

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Description

In this new series, Kazuo Kitai revisits his own photographic archives: faces, bodies under tension, marching crowds, fragments of resistance. Known for documenting the protest movements in Japan during the 1960s, he now chooses to reactivate these images through a radical gesture.

By tearing his silver prints and covering them with paint, Kitai transforms photography into raw material. The documentary becomes abstraction; the image becomes a surface for a hybrid form, somewhere between calligraphy and painting. This work marks a break in his practice: it is no longer about bearing witness, but about reinterpretation.

In these black-and-white photographs, we see helmeted men, workers, police officers, students, inhabited streets, and suspended objects. The artist overlays them with vivid colors and inscribes the Japanese characters “I,” “RO,” and “HA” — the first syllables of the traditional kana order, the equivalent of the “A-B-C” or “B.A.-BA” in Latin script. A return to fundamentals, further emphasized by the numbers “1, 2, 3,” typically recited as a countdown before setting something in motion.

A manifesto in book form — at the intersection of memory, painterly gesture, and renewal.