Sign up to our newsletter and become a Club Huck member.

Stay informed with the cutting edge of sport, music and counterculture

An outsider’s take on 21st century Japan

Independent Mysteries — Since first visiting as a tourist, photographer Michael Magers has been enchanted by Japan. His new book collates work from the past eight years, in which he‘s captured a country bursting with ‘endless possibility’.

Photographer Michael Magers visited Japan for the first time back in 2012. “For most of it, I fumbled around like everyone else,” he remembers. “Especially in the days before I was able to really use Google Maps.” 

It wasn’t until he connected with Shinji Nohara – a man better known as ‘The Tokyo Fixer’ – that the country truly began to reveal itself. Nohara had a reputation as the go-to guide for the world’s best chefs, journalists and top-dollar tourists, helping them uncover places traditionally hard to access for many visitors. With Magers, he quickly set to work. 


“One of the first places he took me was to a coffee shop run by a man called Daibo. It completely shifted my perception. I had worked in the coffee business – early on, I would ‘cup’, or sample coffee for flavour profiles, virtually daily – I thought I knew coffee.  But what Daibo made rendered all previous experience useless.” 

“Here was a man roasting his beans to order, spending maybe 15-20 minutes to make a single cup, and it was otherworldly in its flavour.  The intention, and attention to detail touched me deeply. From there, I was hooked.”

Since then, Magers has travelled to Japan twice a year, usually staying for a few weeks at a time. As a result, he’s worked on various different projects throughout the country, documenting chefs, craftspeople, tattoo artists and more over the course of 15 separate different trips. 

His latest book, Independent Mysteries, sees him capturing “the opaque poetry of everyday life”. While the images featured are taken from work he’s shot all over the world, many find themselves rooted in Japan – shot during downtime and free moments in between assignments. 

For Magers, the country continues to hold endless possibility and fascination. “I have a deep admiration for the care and intention that seems almost effortless in so many things and find that attitude inspiring in and of itself,” he says. 

“It’s also a place that requires commitment and understanding to really get access to the hidden alleyways and secret passages where the magic happens, and I love that it rewards persistence.” 

Despite his outsider status, Magers captures modern Japan with the intimacy of a permanent resident. Whether it’s a candid shot of a commuter on the bullet train, a visit to a tattoo studio or a journey through the country’s rich woodland, there’s a warmth in every single image – one that demonstrates how the country continues to enchant him, even after all these years.

“It’s a video game with infinite levels,” he adds. “Each time I go back, I see something different, eat something new, experience an interaction that reshapes my own perception in the same way that first interaction with Daibo got me hooked. No place is perfect, and Japan can be dense and frustrating and complex… but I feel very at home there.”  


Independent Mysteries is available now from Hatje Cantz

See more of Michael Magers’ work on his official website

Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.


You might like

Huck 83: Life Is A Journey Issue

Glasgow’s Calabash is the restaurant the African diaspora call home

Home Cooking — Having been open in the heart of the city for 15 years, the Kenyan rooted eatery has become a community staple for migrants and Scottish-born locals alike.

Written by: Lisa Maru

Culture

Andrea Modica’s 40 year long Italian Story

Storia — The Italian American photographer first ventured to her ancestral country in 1987, beginning a decades long exploration and documentation of it.

Written by: Miss Rosen

Culture

Exploring Bucovina, the last wild place in Europe

Noroc! — 70% of Romania’s northern provinces are covered in ancient woodland, with its people cultivating a close relationship with the land that stretches back millennia. Jack Burke forages, eats and drinks his way around the region.

Written by: Jack Burke

Sport

War & Pieces: The race to become the world’s fastest jigsaw puzzler

The Obsessives — The UK Jigsaw Puzzle Championships see contestants turn a cosy pastime into a high stakes battleground, as they race to complete 500-piece puzzles in as little time as possible. It’s as much a feat of athleticism as cognitive quickness, reports Ginnia Cheng.

Written by: Ginnia Cheng

Culture

Why is the Met Police using EsDeeKid for ‘copaganda’?

Slop Enforcement — Among the AI slop and ragebait of late-stage social media, newsletter columnist Emma Garland has noticed a jarring trend – London’s police force appropriating criminalised subcultures for engagement purposes.

Written by: Emma Garland

© Mads Nissen
Activism

A stark, confronting window into the global cocaine trade

Sangre Blanca — Mads Nissen’s new book is a close-up look at various stages of the drug’s journey, from production to consumption, and the violence that follows wherever it goes.

Written by: Isaac Muk

Huck is supported by our readers, subscribers and Club Huck members.

You've read articles this month Thanks for reading

Join Club Huck — it's free!

Valued Huck reader, thank you for engaging with our journalism and taking an interest in our dispatches from the sharp edge of culture, sport, music and rebellion.

We want to offer you the chance to join Club Huck [it's free!] where you will receive exclusive newsletters, including personal takes on the state of pop culture and media from columnist Emma Garland, culture recommendations, interviews and dispatches straight to your inbox.

You'll also get priority access to Huck events, merch discounts, and more fun surprises.

Already part of the club? Enter your email above and we'll get you logged in.