- Photography by Jon Ellis / Magnesium
Words by Manny Santiago / Magnesium
Izu is the teardrop peninsula jutting out into the Pacific ocean a little over one hundred kilometers from the mass of gray concrete that is the Tokyo megalopolis. Izu is morning mists, bambooed hilltops and wooden inns nestled in the moist salt air wet from the steam of a hundred hot springs poking through the lush volcanic soil. Izu is where Tokyo’s trains from the 60s go to rust and die, happy recipients of the second most rainfall in Japan. It’s a romantics romance and though proximally near, the makeup of Izu makes for an Alice-through-the-looking-glass kind of trip. For, after all, it is the metamorphosis one undergoes in getting there that is arguably the most important part of the trip. Photographer Jon Ellis is interested in capturing the process of “getting there”, rather than what might be done once arrived.
Please contact licensing@magnesiumphotos.com for more information on licensing these photographs and others on this issue.
Jon Ellis will be participating in the four-person exhibition Fragments of Tokyo from 2/8/10 – 2/14/10 at Place M in Shinjuku. If you are in Tokyo please visit the gallery (click the link below).














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[...] Magnesium Post: Izu Tripping My second piece for Mg is now live. Manny / Brett dreamed up some text for me. He’s a very talented chap. The [...]
[...] Came across this photo essay about Izu, a mountainous peninsula that is close to Tokyo. In part I was drawn to the photographs because I [...]