SNACK SAKURA
Greg Girard
SNACK SAKURA
Photographs: Greg Girard
Text: With a conversation between Greg Girard and Kyoichi Tsuzuki.
Publisher: Kominek
276 pages
Year: 2025
Price: 80 €
Comments: Hardcover with dust jacket, 28,2 x 22,4cm, colors photographs.
Snack Sakura. A Journey Through the Bars of Japan.
If you know Japan you’ll know a certain kind of drinking place called a snack. They are found all over the country, in large cities and small towns. Typically they consist of a counter and a few stools, perhaps a booth or two, usually presided over by a middle-aged woman, the mama, or less often, by a man, the master. The customers tend to be regulars. Unlike a regular bar where a first time customer simply walks in and sits down, the etiquette in a snack for a newcomer is to first ask the mama if it’s ok to come in. The entertainment, if one can call it that, apart from a simple drink menu, is conversation with the mama, conversation with other customers, and karaoke. At the time of writing they are considered the least fashionable places in the country to have a drink.
Some years ago while travelling in Japan I noticed that every town seemed to have a snack named “Sakura”. Sakura, or cherry blossom, is so common a name for a business as to be a bit unimaginative perhaps. Though in a way that seemed in keeping with how unfashionable these places were. It really did seem like every town had one and, upon checking with the All Japan Snack Owners Association, they confirmed that indeed, among their members, Snack Sakura was the most common name. And so I decided to try and visit and photograph as many as I could, across the country from Okinawa to Hokkaido.
In the beginning I had simply stumbled across Snack Sakuras, without looking for them. Once I decided to actually try to find them, things got rather more difficult. Many of them have no phone numbers or web presence. For others that do, by the time you get there you discover they have changed their names, or the building was torn down, or they closed and never re-opened. But little by little I started to make headway. Until after six years of travelling the country I’ve now photographed snacks named “Sakura” in more than half of Japan’s forty-seven prefectures. “Snack Sakura” introduces this not exactly “hidden” world of snacks but one that only comes into view when you look at it from a certain angle.
more books by Greg Girard
more books tagged »colors« | >> see all
-
NAKTA (ASSOCIATION COPY)
by Miguel Rio Branco
sold -
TRANSPARENCIES: SMALL CAMERA WORKS 1971-1979 (SIGNED)
by Stephen Shore
sold -
Maro Akaji / Genyako (Signed)
by Toshihiro Asakura
sold -
Paintings
by Paul Graham
sold -
HYSTERIC THIRTEEN
by Mikiko Hara
sold -
Moving Away (SIGNED)
by Miyako Ishiuchi
sold
more books tagged »japan« | >> see all
-
The Pencil of the Sun, Okinawa & S.E. Asia
by Shomei Tomatsu
sold -
Martin Parr : Japonais endormis
by Martin Parr
sold -
They Called Me Yukari (New edition)
by Hideka Tonomura
sold -
HIKARI 2024 (Edt of 50)
by Collective
sold -
Shakyo Rojin Nikki: Yoko no meinichi (SIGNED WITH OBI)
by Nobuyoshi Araki
sold -
je ne sais pas (Edt of 500 signed)
by Irina Ionesco
Euro 120
more books tagged »Kominek« | >> see all
-
Rayon Vert
by Senta Simond
sold -
BERLIN PICTURES (SIGNED In shrink wrap)
by Mark Steinmetz
sold -
Nightcity Nightcity Nightcity (Signed and numbered edt of 85)
by Antony Cairns
Euro 280 -
Sub Rosa
by Birthe Piontek
sold -
The Unknown (SIGNED)
by Rob Hornstra
Euro 68 -
photocopies from tokyo (Numbered and signed, edt of 100)
by Misha Kominek
Euro 90
Books from the Virtual Bookshelf josefchladek.com

Facebook
Instagram