Fotologging the perfect Tokyo day
Jan. 18th, 2006 11:13 amHere's the first glimpse of "Fotolog", the forthcoming Thames and Hudson book about photoblogging I've contributed texts to. It'll be published in March.

For a big contacts sheet of all the snaps I took yesterday in Tokyo, click the picture. Yesterday was close to the Platonic idea of my perfect day: wandering around Harajuku (La Foret, the new Omotesando Hills building, the sale at Nadiff, Dragonfly Cafe for lunch), then over to Daikanyama for lively conversation with Shizu and David D'Heilly, a look at the great Makoto Aida show at Mizuma, followed by a marathon seven hour eating and drinking session with friends of Hisae's at Sasurai, a cosy, young, stylish and delicious restaurant in Sangenjaya (the shitamachi district some call Sancha, or "three teas"). The afternoon conversation (mostly gaijin) was all art, politics and culture, the evening conversation (Japanese people) all food, friendship and sex, so I felt like my centre of gravity moved from my head to my stomach as the day wore on, or from my ego to my id (as the alcohol took hold).
Meanwhile, over in California, Wired published my new column, Japan grows a beard, a piece about the Slow Life movement.

For a big contacts sheet of all the snaps I took yesterday in Tokyo, click the picture. Yesterday was close to the Platonic idea of my perfect day: wandering around Harajuku (La Foret, the new Omotesando Hills building, the sale at Nadiff, Dragonfly Cafe for lunch), then over to Daikanyama for lively conversation with Shizu and David D'Heilly, a look at the great Makoto Aida show at Mizuma, followed by a marathon seven hour eating and drinking session with friends of Hisae's at Sasurai, a cosy, young, stylish and delicious restaurant in Sangenjaya (the shitamachi district some call Sancha, or "three teas"). The afternoon conversation (mostly gaijin) was all art, politics and culture, the evening conversation (Japanese people) all food, friendship and sex, so I felt like my centre of gravity moved from my head to my stomach as the day wore on, or from my ego to my id (as the alcohol took hold).
Meanwhile, over in California, Wired published my new column, Japan grows a beard, a piece about the Slow Life movement.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-18 02:31 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-18 02:45 am (UTC)But I'll get onto Wired and try and get those fixed.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-18 03:29 am (UTC)There are no trendy art magazines coming out of the Third World. The people of the Republic of Gambia are too busy worrying about when the next military coup is gonna happen.
I'm not knocking the idea of 'stopping to smell the roses' or the occasional epicurean indulgence, but let's be real about the sustainability of this system and what it really is--like socialism, a sort of fantasy concept for people with a fear of responsibility.
I'm so envious...
Date: 2006-01-18 03:53 am (UTC)Well, at least somebody's having it.
Sob, sob
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-18 04:39 am (UTC)On a serious note though--and this is something I've been thinking over and over about--how do computers mess up this slow life way of living? For me, it's only because of the connectivity offered by the internet, that I even contemplate living in the middle of nowhere. But it's becoming an increasingly strong ambition. I want to live a life I believe in, but is it doomed to be compromised by the very thing that makes it possible?
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-18 04:52 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-18 04:52 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-18 04:57 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-18 06:03 am (UTC)And yes, I'm afraid that a NYT Sunday Magazine aritcle about pointless shopping sprees isn't going to happen, when you have a portfolio of Ralph Fiennes, actor from the film The Constant Gardener, wearing a $195 Calvin Klein shirt in the magazine already.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-18 07:30 am (UTC)I saw on the "culturenews" about blogging in China and the boss of the chinese company that hosts a large amount of blogs in China thought that the amount of bloggers would be 60 millions(or billions?) by this years end.
Might happen the same to the all-popular swedish photolog/photoblog site bilddagboken (http://www.bilddagboken.se/).
Whoops!
Date: 2006-01-18 07:52 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-18 09:27 am (UTC)Unother Unsolicited Moan About London
Date: 2006-01-18 10:07 am (UTC)In the good old days when there were such college grants and dole money, that money went straight back into local economies.
British industry grew fat on the Kinks, The Who and The Beatles spending their college grants on Vox AC30s.
I think these little networks that people create on the internet and elsewhere should print their own money, start their own economies.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-18 10:16 am (UTC)I'd agree, as you say in the Wired article, that the movement represents a shift in focus from money to quality of life, but for many only in as far as you swap magazine subscriptions and favoured designers. Are these followers of Slow Life just turning into their imaginary/projected grandparents? It feels rather like Fresh and Wild (http://www.freshandwild.com/), a chain of organic supermarkets here in London, where the local middle classes throng to buy vastly overpriced produce in the belief that this will stave off environmental catastrophe and/or their own physical demise. The comforts of the Sunday colour supplements.
There's an echo of sorts in the Japanese millenarian spirits of the 19th century (the world renewal of yonaoshi ikki), which may have lacked coherency as a political movement, but had something of a sans-culotte attitude. If I compare that sort of dreaming to Slow Life, I'm not sure whether contemporary Japan isn't losing it teeth along with maybe growing that long white beard. Is Slow Life just an interim urban comfort for the ageing Shibuya-kei generation before death?
How about going out and about when you return to Osaka and interviewing some of the homeless there? They seem to be one group who are maybe actually living something of this low-impact recyclable lifestyle and I am sure there are some interesting stories there amidst the cardboard and tarpaulin.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-18 03:18 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-18 04:01 pm (UTC)What, again (http://www.viceland.com/issues/v10n8/htdocs/moo.php)?
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-18 04:07 pm (UTC)Re: Unother Unsolicited Moan About London
Date: 2006-01-18 05:14 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-18 06:07 pm (UTC)<a href="http://jungle-world.com/seiten/2006/03/7018.php" /a>
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-18 06:12 pm (UTC)hey nick!
Date: 2006-01-18 06:21 pm (UTC)Thank you so much for everything.
I hope to get a chance to meet you in NY this winter/spring. Either at the Whitney or an April book party, which I think is in the planning stages.
All best,
Andrew