Shoko Esumi.68 |verified| — Rikitake No.119

Yasushi Rikitake

Rikitake No.119 Shoko Esumi.68 " refers to a specific work by the Japanese photographer , who is known for his extensive portrait photography series in the 1980s and 90s. Key Context

Rikitake Collection No.119

Specimen: Shoko Esumi (?? possibly a misreading of a rock type or location name) .68 = 1968 acquisition Rikitake No.119 Shoko Esumi.68

Or "Shoko Esumi" could be the name of a donor. In post-war Japan, private collectors sometimes donated seismograph paper rolls. Item 119 from the Rikitake donation, tag written by archivist: "Shoko Esumi" (the donor), followed by .68 (year of donation). Yasushi Rikitake Rikitake No

2.4 Personal or Family Archive

Without more specific information, it's difficult to provide a more detailed feature. If you have any specific requirements or topics you'd like to explore, I'd be happy to try and help. Internal document – Never digitized or publicly released

The episode begins with the introduction of Shoko Esumi, a brilliant and reclusive cartographer known only by her codename, 68. Rumors have long circulated about her exceptional talent in creating maps that seem almost... prophetic. As Rikitake No.119, the protagonist, delves deeper into Esumi's life, he discovers a series of cryptic maps that hint at a long-lost civilization.

Body

: Discuss the details of the document or artwork, its historical context, and its significance. If applicable, include analysis or interpretation.

4. Technical/Collector Notes

  1. Internal document – Never digitized or publicly released. Many Japanese corporate, academic, and government archives remain closed or uncatalogued online.
  2. Typo or OCR error – Original text might be different. For example, “Rikitake No.119 Shoko Esumi” could be a misreading of handwriting: “Rikitake No.119 証拠 江角.68” (Shoko meaning evidence).
  3. Private collection – Held by family or a small museum with no online presence.
  4. Fiction or constructed memory – Could be a deliberate puzzle (ARG alternate reality game), a spam text artifact, or a forgotten user ID from an early internet database (e.g., 1990s Japanese BBS).