

Tokyo Photo Dead Wave is a new bi-weekly series curated by Néojaponisme showcasing the best up-and-coming new photography from Tokyo.
The second photo in the series is by American photographer Patrick Tsai.
“This photo was originally full color… anyways Japanese armpit hair is always black… I think.”
See the original color version here.
For a larger image of the photograph, please click here
About Patrick Tsai:
Patrick Tsai was born in America, but, as he could, he left. Since then, he has been working in Taiwan, China, and Japan as a photographer documenting the strange and the beautiful. His work has been featured in Foam Magazine, Vice Magazine, as well as the Hyere’s Festival.
For more information please visit his website www.hellopatpat.com.
Ian Lynam is a graphic designer living in Tokyo and the art director of Neojaponisme. His website is located at
ianlynam.com. His new book,
Parallel Strokes, on the intersection of graffiti and typography is available now.
Posted in Tokyo Photo Dead Wave 2 Comments »


Tokyo Photo Dead Wave is a new bi-weekly series curated by Néojaponisme showcasing the best up-and-coming new photography from Tokyo.
The second photo in the series is by Swiss photographer Andreas Seibert. Regarding the image, Seibert writes:
“Yasukuni Shrine, a Shinto Shrine located in Tokyo, commemorates Japan’s war dead. The Shrine itself and particularly the visits by Japanese Prime Ministers and other high politicians are a highly controversial issue, domestically and inernationally.
People stand silent to commemorate the moment when Emperor Hirohito declared the capitulation of Japan on August 15, 1945.”
For a larger image of the photograph, please click here
About Andreas Seibert:
Born 1970 in Switzerland. He studied Photography at the Zurich University of the Arts as well as German Literature and Philosophy at the Zurich University. He has been living in Tokyo since 1997. His photographic works have been published in numerous international magazines and have been on show in exhibitions around the world. He has been member of the photographers agency “Lookat Photos”. Since 2002 he has been working on a long-term photographic study about the live and work of Chinese migrant workers. This study has been published in 2008 as book by Lars Mueller Publishers. In 2009 Swiss cineaste Villi Hermann finished his documentary about Andreas Seibert, titled “From Somewhere to Nowhere – on the road in China with photographer Andreas Seibert”.
For more information please visit his website www.andreasseibert.com.
Ian Lynam is a graphic designer living in Tokyo and the art director of Neojaponisme. His website is located at
ianlynam.com. His new book,
Parallel Strokes, on the intersection of graffiti and typography is available now.
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Tokyo Photo Dead Wave is a new bi-weekly series curated by Néojaponisme showcasing the best up-and-coming new photography from Tokyo. The series makes its debut with a photograph by Mari Kojima.
For a larger image of the photograph, please click here
About Mari Kojima:
“I was born in Shimane, Japan. I grew up alright and now I’m 27. I work, take photos, sometimes draw and make patterns and such, eat ham and sausages very often but not so much if it makes any sense. I’m interested in things or people that are brutally honest.”
Visit her website here.
Ian Lynam is a graphic designer living in Tokyo and the art director of Neojaponisme. His website is located at
ianlynam.com. His new book,
Parallel Strokes, on the intersection of graffiti and typography is available now.
Posted in Tokyo Photo Dead Wave 6 Comments »