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Win a Solo Exhibition this February. Juror: Harvey Stein
Win a Solo Exhibition this February. Juror: Harvey Stein

Photo Book

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Photographer: Kenro Izu
Publisher: Nazraeli Press
Publication date: October 2025
Print length: 168 pages
Language: English
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Kenro Izu: Mono no Aware is a quiet and deeply contemplative meditation on time, spirit, and the fragile beauty of existence. Drawing on more than five decades of photographic practice, Kenro Izu brings together images that speak not through spectacle, but through stillness. Rooted in Japanese aesthetics and spiritual philosophy, this body of work invites the viewer to slow down and observe how meaning resides in what is passing, weathered, and momentary.

At the heart of the book are three interconnected subjects. Ancient Noh masks, carved in the fourteenth century, bear the subtle traces of human emotion and ritual memory. Their expressions seem to hover between presence and absence, echoing the themes of pride, solitude, and transcendence found in Noh theatre. Alongside them, Izu photographs stones and venerable trees surrounding former shrine sites, natural witnesses to centuries of devotion and ceremony. These enduring forms are paired with images of wildflowers and grasses that bloom briefly, then disappear, completing a cycle of permanence and impermanence.

Through these subjects, Izu explores the philosophical dimensions of Yugen, Sabi, and Wabi. Depth, age, restraint, and humility emerge not as abstract ideas, but as visual experiences shaped by light, texture, and tone. The restrained duotone printing and natural matte paper enhance this sensibility, allowing each image to breathe and resonate quietly. The work feels deliberately removed from the urgency of contemporary image culture, honoring a slower, more reflective way of seeing.

Presented as a finely crafted two-volume edition, Mono no Aware stands as both an art object and a spiritual offering. It reflects Izu’s lifelong pursuit of inner sacredness across cultures and landscapes, while remaining firmly anchored in Japanese thought. This limited publication is less a statement than an invitation—to contemplate impermanence, to find beauty in transience, and to recognize the dignity of things that will not last.

Our printed edition showcases the winners of AAP Magazine call of entries
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