
Vendor Profile
SEIGENSHA Art Publishing
Address | 9-1 Umetadacho Kyotoshinakagyokukarasumahigashiiru Kyoto, JAPAN ZIP:604-8136 |
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Representative Name | MAKOTO KATAYAMA |
Annual Revenue | closed |
No. of Employees | 24 |
Web Site URL | |
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Art/Design Magazine Book
SD item code:13362299
Detail | Price & Quantity | ||
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S1 |
Author: Atsushi Okada
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著者:岡田敦
(987)
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(987)
Wholesale Price: Members Only
1 pc /set
In Stock
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Shipping Date |
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About 1 week
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Dimensions |
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Format:B5 (horizontal) Total pages:304 Binding:top binding
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Specifications |
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Country of manufacture: Japan
Material / component: Paper
Product tag: None
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Description
[My journey around the isolated islands of the north will finally come to an end.] -(Photographer*Atsushi Okada) (Photographer* Atsushi Okada) - [My journey around the isolated northern island is finally complete. Yururi is an uninhabited island with a circumference of 8 kilometers, located off the Nemuro Peninsula, at the easternmost tip of Japan's mainland. The background to the fact that this island has become a no-landing island inhabited only by horses is deeply related to the history of Hokkaido, from its pioneering period through the last World War to the present day. (From the text) This is a collection of photographs taken by photographer Atsushi Okada over a period of more than 10 years on a "phantom island" where only horses live for more than half a century after humans stopped living there, documenting the disappearing forms and scenery. It was 1950 when people took their horses to Yuluri Island in search of a drying place for kelp fishing. After more than 20 years, the last islanders left the island in 1971, and Yulli Island became uninhabited again. In 2006, the aging of the former islanders made it difficult to manage the horses, and the stallions were removed from the island. The island's horses were destined to slowly cease to exist. In the summer of 2011, when Okada visited the island for the first time, there were 12 horses on the island, but they gradually disappeared, and by 2024 there were only two horses left. Language: Japanese and English |
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Shipping Method | Estimated Arrival |
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Sea Mail | From Jul.24th 2025 to Sep.25th 2025 |
Air Mail | From Jul.8th 2025 to Jul.10th 2025 |
EMS | From Jul.7th 2025 to Jul.10th 2025 |
Pantos Express | From Jul.9th 2025 to Jul.14th 2025 |
DHL | From Jul.7th 2025 to Jul.9th 2025 |
UPS | From Jul.7th 2025 to Jul.9th 2025 |
FedEx | From Jul.7th 2025 to Jul.9th 2025 |
Some trading conditions may be applicable only in Japan.
*Important Notice
Under the resale price maintenance system, publishers are legally allowed to specify the selling price of their books. We ask that your company also adhere to the sales price specified by us. In the unlikely event that you fail to do so, we will discontinue our business with you. We ask for your understanding in advance. *Delivery of pre-order items If you place an order for pre-order items together with other books, we will basically put them all on hold together and ship them together after the pre-order items are back in stock. *If you wish to have only other books shipped first, please contact us by message. [Exceptions]. If the total order amount for both the reserved items and the other books exceeds the shipping lot, we will ship the other books first with the earliest possible delivery date. |
Other items from this category:
(Photographer* Atsushi Okada) - [My journey around the isolated northern island is finally complete.
Yururi is an uninhabited island with a circumference of 8 kilometers, located off the Nemuro Peninsula, at the easternmost tip of Japan's mainland.
The background to the fact that this island has become a no-landing island inhabited only by horses is deeply related to the history of Hokkaido, from its pioneering period through the last World War to the present day. (From the text)
This is a collection of photographs taken by photographer Atsushi Okada over a period of more than 10 years on a "phantom island" where only horses live for more than half a century after humans stopped living there, documenting the disappearing forms and scenery.
It was 1950 when people took their horses to Yuluri Island in search of a drying place for kelp fishing.
After more than 20 years, the last islanders left the island in 1971, and Yulli Island became uninhabited again.
In 2006, the aging of the former islanders made it difficult to manage the horses, and the stallions were removed from the island.
The island's horses were destined to slowly cease to exist.
In the summer of 2011, when Okada visited the island for the first time, there were 12 horses on the island, but they gradually disappeared, and by 2024 there were only two horses left.
Language: Japanese and English