San Francisco
Yoshi Yubai's "San Francisco" photography book is a walk through a seldom-seen part of the city, where Yubai met, and both befriended and "stole" images of the denizens of the dark he encountered. Often on a bicycle in the wee hours of the morning, he found an alternate reality of darkness and psychological border crossing. These elements were also found in the broad daylight of the downtown business world and the advertisements that decorate these streets. With an eye from Asia, Yoshi Yubai has captured a part of the underground that most of us may never see. All shot with a 35mm celluloid camera and hand-printed in Japan. Yoshi Yubai’s street photography is in the realm of Daido Moriyama: "The World through My Eyes" (2010 isbn 9788857200613) and the photography of Naito Masatoshi.
1136958241
San Francisco
Yoshi Yubai's "San Francisco" photography book is a walk through a seldom-seen part of the city, where Yubai met, and both befriended and "stole" images of the denizens of the dark he encountered. Often on a bicycle in the wee hours of the morning, he found an alternate reality of darkness and psychological border crossing. These elements were also found in the broad daylight of the downtown business world and the advertisements that decorate these streets. With an eye from Asia, Yoshi Yubai has captured a part of the underground that most of us may never see. All shot with a 35mm celluloid camera and hand-printed in Japan. Yoshi Yubai’s street photography is in the realm of Daido Moriyama: "The World through My Eyes" (2010 isbn 9788857200613) and the photography of Naito Masatoshi.
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Overview

Yoshi Yubai's "San Francisco" photography book is a walk through a seldom-seen part of the city, where Yubai met, and both befriended and "stole" images of the denizens of the dark he encountered. Often on a bicycle in the wee hours of the morning, he found an alternate reality of darkness and psychological border crossing. These elements were also found in the broad daylight of the downtown business world and the advertisements that decorate these streets. With an eye from Asia, Yoshi Yubai has captured a part of the underground that most of us may never see. All shot with a 35mm celluloid camera and hand-printed in Japan. Yoshi Yubai’s street photography is in the realm of Daido Moriyama: "The World through My Eyes" (2010 isbn 9788857200613) and the photography of Naito Masatoshi.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781889307336
Publisher: RE/Search Publications
Publication date: 05/08/2020
Series: RE/Search , #20
Pages: 192
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Yoshi Yubai was born in 1980 and grew up in Hiroshima, Japan. He began studying countercultures as a teenager, and became an expert in rock music, Punk, and unusual cultural phenomena. He first traveled to San Francisco at age 20, returning several times to study English and intern at RE/Search. He began using a film camera during this time, studying with Ana Barrado and returning to Japan to study with Masatoshi Naito for a period. He also traveled extensively in Europe, studying the 16th century printmaking and painting masters, and moved to New York City for a period, doing Street Photography there and helping out at Japanese restaurants.

V. Vale has been a countercultural publisher for over 40 years, starting in Punk Rock.

Gee Vaucher is a multii-media artist working in film, video, collage, painting, printmaking and more. She is a founding member of the U.K. based group, CRASS, and has remained active in many fields including art, music production, letterpress, and installations.

Preface

Introduction by V. Vale  Privilege confers blinders. But privilege involves a kind of enormously complex mosaic of perception akin to what David Cronenberg showed us in The Fly, his marvelous evocation of how a tiny commonplace Diptera house y perceives “reality.” Privilege itself is an almost in nite hegemony of signs and signi ers relating not just to materiality (clothing, shoes, hairstyle, personal luggage, automobiles, architecture, city planning) but to behaviorality (having to do with everything that constitutes body language—from posture, positioning, walking, gesturality, eye contact, facial expressiveness, body expressiveness, accent, timing, and much more).  Privilege involves race, nationality (not necessarily the same), gender (now a spectrum), age, family (or the lack thereof), income levels, education, “looks” (as in “good”), intellectual-cultural-experience, travel-experience, and that bête noir of American democracy, “social class” (which most people pretend doesn’t exist).  On April 8, 2002, a 21-year-old Japanese male RE/Search fan traveled from Hiroshima, Japan, to San Francisco expressly to meet RE/Search. His name was Yoshi Yubai and already he perceived that something he resonated with—a search for “incredibly strange”—could be enhanced, developed and extended by a personal meeting (and subsequent connection) with the RE/Search of ce. He stayed 200 feet away at the Royal Paci c Motor Inn where William S. Burroughs had once stayed in 1981.  He brought with him his Japanese cultural upbringing which involved being extremely polite, quiet and unassuming, immediately helpful- and-of-service, and relentlessly curious. But already he was his own man. He looked at most of the 10,000 books in the RE/Search library and focused on what attracted him the most: Flemish painting (Hubert van Eyck, et al) from the lowlands of Europe. Eventually he would visit many of the world’s city museums to see these paintings in person, and buy the monographs.  He also developed a friendship with photographer Ana Barrado whose extraordinary infra-red photographs are featured in RE/Search #8/9: J.G. Ballard and J.G. Ballard’s Atrocity Exhibition (the RE/Search annotated 8.5x11” edition). He had already begun studying the entire history of world photography, spotlighting obscure Japanese photographers, and he decided to shoot black-and-white lm rather than the more-inexpensive digital alternatives. In Japan he studied darkroom techniques and eventually became a contributor to the Japan Vice website, also contributing verbal texts and interviews.  After that rst visit, Yoshi stayed at the RE/Search of ce as an “adopted son” and this home base possibly enabled him to visit the U.S. more often and for lengthier periods of time. Long ago he stayed a year while of cially enrolled in a full-time English-language study course. A perfect guest, he spent most of his non-school-hours exploring the Bay Area, often returning late at night so as to give his hosts maximum privacy. (A very sensitive roommate, probably unparalleled.)  Yoshi began taking more photographs, both color and black-and-white, as well as seeking out more and more independent artists. He was drawn to the most-“outsider” individuals existing at the boundaries of the of cial “art world,” such as Monte Cazazza of the Industrial Culture Handbook; Mickey McGowan, curator of Marin County’s “Unknown Museum”; John Whitehead, semi- gurative landscape painter; Charles Gatewood, self-described “family photographer of the American Underground”; and Yosuke Konishi, founder of the Nuclear War Now! noise music record label.  As he became more courageous staying with us through the years in San Francisco, Yoshi borrowed our cheap mountain bike (purchased for $40 from the Oakland Salvation Army) and began exploring the somewhat-dangerous Tenderloin during the post-midnight hours. More than once he had to pedal furiously away from a hazardous situation. But he wasn’t just photographing the city’s homeless, mentally-ill and the non-white unemployed—he had an eye for anyone who STOOD OUT on San Francisco’s sidewalks. He knew the principle that anything in a photograph is an “actor,” and much earlier had internalized Cartier- Bresson’s “the decisive moment” “holy grail” epiphanic shutter-clicking.  At some point Yoshi succeeded in making the dif cult move from his hometown of Hiroshima to the major city of Tokyo. At a Tokyo Art Book  Fair he met Max Stadnik, a founder of Tiny Splendor Press, which not only publishes but prints their own independent books and zines on a Risograph machine (a “medium” or stand-alone technology which has come into its own, worldwide, in the past fteen years). Max agreed to publish a book of Yoshi’s black-and-white photographs shot on analog lm and hand-printed in a darkroom to produce silver-gelatin prints.  Like Diane Arbus, Yoshi often seemed to be personally involved with his subjects, judging by the smiles he captured. Longtime denizens of North Beach will undoubtedly recognize a sidewalk “supermodel” who often sprawled outside The Saloon, and a hirsute sidewalk vendor who frequently displayed his wares near the storied City Lights Bookstore. The more urban neighborhoods: Market Street, the Tenderloin, the Mission District, Coit Tower, Fisherman’s Wharf—can all be recognized. More importantly, key archetypes of San Francisco’s citizens who set foot on its sidewalks can be studied in their darkest shadows, captured by the non-judgmental eye of an impartial-yet-somehow-sympathetic outsider traveling through a parallel alien planet.  Yoshi’s itinerant “ y-on-the-wall” images have captured the true history of Future-San Francisco-in-the-Making, from Bohemian Paradise to Tech Heaven, unvarnished by governmental-mayoral propaganda or tourist-brochure whitewashing. The last of the pre-tech-oligarchy real humans are revealed in all their panoramic poetic splendor, before the end of the analog world as we once knew it. Yet, as Yosuke Konishi said long ago, “Only Analog is Real.” Maybe the Digital World is already extinct; we just don’t know it yet. Only time will tell.  V. Vale, San Francisco, September 2019 
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