Johann
10-26-2010, 11:32 AM
I've lived in Toronto for exactly two years now and I've found a lot of items. Money, TTC tokens, joints (yes- whole rolled joints- those silly and scared tourists!) but by far the greatest item I've found is a first edition (1983) hardcover book (in near-mint shape no less) of EIKO BY EIKO.
It's a self-made career-to-date-book by Eiko Ishioka, Japan's most famous designer.
I picked it up and looked immediately at the cover photo, thinking it looked Kubrickian. It was an unrecognizable Faye Dunaway posing in Japanese garb with two of Eiko's nieces.
When I started flipping through it I was blown away.
Here is someone who knocks my socks off with her media designs and film costumes and poster designs.
There is a giant gatefold with 2 different posters that she designed for APOCALYPSE NOW. Jaw-dropping how awesome those two painted posters are. One is the armada of helicopters advancing over the beach while a soldier surfs and another is one of Brando, looking off into space, with those napalm clouds billowing behind him. Just awesome. (I've subsequently looked her up, and she did the costumes for MISHIMA, BRAM STOKER'S DRACULA and Tarsem's two Masterpieces, THE CELL and THE FALL).
She also was the first to curate an exhibition for Leni Riefenstahl for her NUBA tribe work- also with frameable posters! Leni has comments about Eiko too. Everybody in the book does, pretty much.
I am still blown away that I just *found* this book. It weighs almost 10 pounds. Who would just leave it lying in a park?
Akira Kurosawa is one of many who write essays on her in the book. He calls her a "Comrade", that he has a deep bond with Eiko.
Why in the hell have I never heard of this woman!?!?!?
She's a Genius Artist. The book is chock full of her work- magazine covers, Miles Davis album covers (and others), ads, film stills, the whole gamut!
The book is a first edition from when it came out in 1983, printed and bound in Japan.
It's the first "coffee table book" I own, and it was totally free. I'm a blessed man.
It's a self-made career-to-date-book by Eiko Ishioka, Japan's most famous designer.
I picked it up and looked immediately at the cover photo, thinking it looked Kubrickian. It was an unrecognizable Faye Dunaway posing in Japanese garb with two of Eiko's nieces.
When I started flipping through it I was blown away.
Here is someone who knocks my socks off with her media designs and film costumes and poster designs.
There is a giant gatefold with 2 different posters that she designed for APOCALYPSE NOW. Jaw-dropping how awesome those two painted posters are. One is the armada of helicopters advancing over the beach while a soldier surfs and another is one of Brando, looking off into space, with those napalm clouds billowing behind him. Just awesome. (I've subsequently looked her up, and she did the costumes for MISHIMA, BRAM STOKER'S DRACULA and Tarsem's two Masterpieces, THE CELL and THE FALL).
She also was the first to curate an exhibition for Leni Riefenstahl for her NUBA tribe work- also with frameable posters! Leni has comments about Eiko too. Everybody in the book does, pretty much.
I am still blown away that I just *found* this book. It weighs almost 10 pounds. Who would just leave it lying in a park?
Akira Kurosawa is one of many who write essays on her in the book. He calls her a "Comrade", that he has a deep bond with Eiko.
Why in the hell have I never heard of this woman!?!?!?
She's a Genius Artist. The book is chock full of her work- magazine covers, Miles Davis album covers (and others), ads, film stills, the whole gamut!
The book is a first edition from when it came out in 1983, printed and bound in Japan.
It's the first "coffee table book" I own, and it was totally free. I'm a blessed man.