

Sometime in November, Marxy of Néojaponisme and Patrick Macias — author of such books as Cruising the Anime City: An Otaku Guide to Neo Tokyo
and Japanese Schoolgirl Inferno: Tokyo Teen Fashion Subculture Handbook
— met in Inokashira Park and recorded a very long podcast about Harajuku and the past, present, and future of Japanese fashion. The result spans over an hour and twenty minutes, and yes, we edited out a lot of the boring parts. Hear Marxy talk about the minutiae of his first visits to A Bathing Ape in 1998. Hear P. Macias talk about the high-pressure sales staff at Shibuya 109-2. Good news: it ends on an optimistic note.
Intro song: “1996″ by Cornelius
Ending song: “Volunteer Ape Man (Disco)” by Cornelius
Download: Harajuku Requiem: Marxy x Patrick Macias on Tokyo Fashion Past and Present
General Néojaponisme Podcast RSS Feed: .rss
W. David Marx (Marxy) — Tokyo-based writer and musician — is the founder and chief editor of Néojaponisme.
Posted in Consumer Culture, Fashion, Personal History, Podcasts, Popular Culture, Subculture, Subculture, The Past, The Present, Youth Culture 8 Comments »


Recently unearthed outside of the city of Sano in Tochigi-ken, this series of pictures documents Japan as it engaged with modernization and commercial photography in the Meiji and Taishō Periods. The series is comprised of portrait photography in particular.

Portrait photography has been around since the invention and popularization of the camera. It is (and was) a cheaper and often more accessible method than portrait painting, which had been used by distinguished figures before the popularity of the camera.
The relatively low cost of the daguerreotype in the middle of the 19th century led to its popularity for portraiture. Studios soon sprang up in cities around Japan. The style of these early works reflected the technical challenges associated with 30-second exposure times and the painterly aesthetic of the time. Indoors, subjects were generally seated against plain or painted backgrounds and lit with the soft light of an overhead window or whatever else could be reflected with mirrors. Outside, subjects were arranged compositionally against a variety of architectural backgrounds.
The series of found photographs is comprised of approximately 70 images which will be released one a week over the upcoming year. The series is an excellent example of how societies have used commercial art to frame history and culture, coinciding with my personal agenda to legitimize commercial art as more than mere hack work. Arriving at a time when nostalgia for days past is at an all-time high in Japan, this collection is a very poised look into history.
The Meeting Modernity series of found photographs will comprise Néojaponisme’s first traveling exhibition. Details on the exhibition will be posted in the upcoming couple of weeks.
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 Architecture, Conceptions of Japan, Meeting Modernity, Personal History, Photography, The Past, Visual Art 3 Comments »


In 2000, Tokyo-resident photographer Alin Huma discovered a group of negatives at a Osaka flea market simply named “Midori.” He has processed and organized these images into a special downloadable PDF booklet for Néojaponisme.
Download the PDF.
Posted in Personal History, Photography, The Past 4 Comments »