TOKYO 1946, TADAHIKO HAYASHI |
I loved this incredible photo by Tadahiko. A glamorous model poses on a ledge above the streets of bombed-out postwar Tokyo. It captures the essence of kayodatsu and kasutori that sprang up in defeated Japan.
Kayodatsu was the culture of post-war despair. Kasutori the nihilism, crime, drugs and violence that morphed out of it and grabbed urban society by the throat. The black market, street gangs, pulp literature and sleazy sex. Kasutori was led by decadent bohemians drinking and screwing themselves into oblivion. Its name came from the sake dregs – kasu – that fuelled it. The most notorious booze was the bakudan ‘bomb’, a lethal cocktail made with methyl alcohol.
Blindness and death.
Kasutori inspired the absurdity, sleazy violence
and nihilism bleeding through Man in a Zen Ambulance. A blitzed-out Tokyo morphed into the 1950s badlands atomic age setting. Elvis and early rock and roll provided the driving frenetic music. Teddy Boys and Yakuza shooting it out.
No comments:
Post a Comment