Rikitake.54 - Friends Album By Yasushi

The book unfolds like a memory itself: non-linear, impressionistic. One spread shows two figures walking along a rain-slicked path, their backs to us, umbrellas touching like hesitant hands. Another presents a still life—an empty chair by a window, afternoon light pooling on a wooden floor. A cat sleeping on a sun-warmed stone. A half-drunk cup of tea beside a newspaper.

For anyone who has ever found beauty in the quiet spaces between words, or cherished the simple act of walking beside someone without needing to speak, Friends Album is not just a book to see, but one to feel. It is a quiet masterpiece about the quietest of loves: friendship itself. Friends Album By Yasushi Rikitake.54

The cover, a muted gray-blue with simple typography, suggests an old family photo album—not the glossy, perfect kind, but the worn one kept on a low shelf, opened on rainy afternoons. In a photographic landscape often dominated by spectacle and immediacy, Yasushi Rikitake’s Friends Album dares to be small, slow, and tender. It does not demand attention; it invites companionship. Looking through its pages feels less like viewing a collection of artworks and more like sitting beside an old friend in comfortable silence—watching the light shift, saying nothing, but understanding everything. The book unfolds like a memory itself: non-linear,

The book unfolds like a memory itself: non-linear, impressionistic. One spread shows two figures walking along a rain-slicked path, their backs to us, umbrellas touching like hesitant hands. Another presents a still life—an empty chair by a window, afternoon light pooling on a wooden floor. A cat sleeping on a sun-warmed stone. A half-drunk cup of tea beside a newspaper.

For anyone who has ever found beauty in the quiet spaces between words, or cherished the simple act of walking beside someone without needing to speak, Friends Album is not just a book to see, but one to feel. It is a quiet masterpiece about the quietest of loves: friendship itself.

The cover, a muted gray-blue with simple typography, suggests an old family photo album—not the glossy, perfect kind, but the worn one kept on a low shelf, opened on rainy afternoons. In a photographic landscape often dominated by spectacle and immediacy, Yasushi Rikitake’s Friends Album dares to be small, slow, and tender. It does not demand attention; it invites companionship. Looking through its pages feels less like viewing a collection of artworks and more like sitting beside an old friend in comfortable silence—watching the light shift, saying nothing, but understanding everything.