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  •  
    119,-

    Christopher LG Hill (Melbourne, Australia)_x000D_Bagged Goods_x000D_Black & White Photocopy_x000D_Edition of 100

  •  
    355,-

    New-York based Hassla compiles the photography of B. Ingrid Olson and the writing of Jesse Carsten, with Salt. The juxtaposition feels appropriate, as each photograph or text has a distinct brevity and leaves much to the imagination of its audience. Olson's photographs center on the female form, against blurred and colorful backdrops. Carsten's writings center on a similar ambiguity, with phrases that seem to make little sense but go together seamlessly. No matter the message perceived, Salt is heavy on aesthetic value.

  • av Ari Marcopoulos
    185,-

    One roll of film that was all photographed on one day, 10/10/10

  • av David Schoerner
    309,-

    Daisuke Yokota presented to the public an immense installation of 100,000 photographic prints coated in wax at the Aichi Triennial held in August 2016. Yokota's work 'Matter', a work whereby photographs had been printed on rolls of paper, had become a sensation.  'MATTER / BURN OUT' is an extension of the work 'Matter' which was exhibited in Xiamen in remembrance of 70 years after the war between Japan and China. Once the exhibition had come to a close, the work was burnt in the vacant space in the area. This 'burn out' process was documented in 4,000 photographs, whereby the data was processed, manipulated and revived to form a brand new, large scale work called "MATTER / BURN OUT", and edited in this new book. _x000D__x000D_

  •  
    139,-

    Photograph and artist Makoto Oono approaches the collection of organic and chaotic spaces via picture-taking and creates the works that have been shown in Tokyo and overseas. Focusing on the breeding as well as observation, he oddly expresses discovered habits and details of the organism. _x000D__x000D_This is his first photo book on his accumulation of traps, named "SEPARATE HIDDEN RULES".  While isolating the viewer in the cage with various life forms, each work makes us confused and collapse our imagination one after another. He shows new possibilities of nature photography in urban circumstances and contemporary life.

  •  
    95,-

    R O Y G B I V sees artist and publisher David Schoerner photograph a spectrum of falling coloured papers in a series that pairs a rigorous approach to photography with a joyous and playful subject matter.  Presented at a scale that calls to mind the polaroid studio test shot, Schoerner's images tumble jubilantly across the folded pages of this accordion booklet.

  • av Heather Guertin
    275,-

    Issue 5 of PUSS PUSS is guest curated by Heathermary Jackson and comes with 4 amazing covers including all round fashion icon and well-known cat lover Grace Coddington photographed by Juergen Teller, artist and actress India Salvor Menuez photographed by Sandy Kim, model of the moment and animal lover Jane Moseley photographed by Gia Coppola and a shoot by the late Ren Hang, to whom we have posthumously dedicated this issue. Other stories include an interview with French soundscape artist extraordinaire, Michel Gaubert; British artist Sue Webster; photographer and filmmaker Gia Coppola as well as photo shoots featuring some of the best talent and much more.

  •  
    275,-

    Pascual certainly 'takes' photographs - they are just not her own. She resurrects pictures, and fragments of pictures, from long forgotten archives - graduation photos or portraits tossed out by celebrity publicists.

  • av Adam Marnie
    175,-

    The Rose, a sprawling poem by Pittsburgh poet, Ed Steck was his response to a suite of 9 collages that New York visual artist, Adam Marnie made by cutting up photographs of a hydrangea still-life, which were mailed to him in early 2012-resulting in mirrored explorations of beauty, redaction, and the porousness of language and image. The 35 page poem was written in this collaborative process over the two year correspondence yielding three sections: The Grid, The Rose, The Desert.

  •  
    519,-

    Anya Phillips, James Chance's former manager and girlfriend, took photo portraits of James from the late 70's until her death in 1981. _x000D__x000D_During the late 70's through the mid 80's in New York City, various combinations of factors such as experimental music, experimental video, performance art, and contemporary art burst forth and gave rise to the No Wave movement. In the middle of the vortex, occurring during that time of freewheeling stage performances and amidst the gathered public attention was the saxophonist James Chance. So too, his manager and lover Anya Phillips, the eponymous co-founder of the legendary nightclub, the Mudd Club, whose huge influence was echoing across the city's underground culture even as she left the world at the tender age of 26. But really, who was Anya? In that chaotic time in New York City, with its New Wave centered in overflowing anger at commercialism, what manner of things could James and Anya have been seeing, and what kind of thoughts did they embrace in their everyday lives?_x000D__x000D_?This one and only book of Anya's photography uncovers the unknown face of the post-punk legend, which only his inseparable girlfriend could capture in the midst of turbulent times. The title also introduces contributions from Diego Cortez, James' old friend and Anya's former housemate, also a co-owner of the Mudd Club. The first to officially use the word "No Wave" in a formal context, the very person who curated the New York/New Wave exhibit at MoMA PS1 in 1981, Cortez recalls the fleeting, unforgettable days of James and Anya.

  • av Seth Fluker
    265,-

    Badlands 777 releases the third issue of their self-published magazine entitled, Wake up. We've arrived. We're changing the world. The issue presents a collection of work from dynamic modern creatives, bounded by the prevalent theme of women within the music industry. _x000D__x000D_Art demands courage, and with that courage, we can challenge authority. It's time to wake up, because we've arrived, and we're changing the world. _x000D__x000D_Badlands 777 Issue #3 Wake up. We've arrived. We're changing the world features photography from Tom Craig, Richard Kern, Monika Mogi, Arvida Byström, Dafy Hagai and many more. Features include Pam Hogg, Warpaint, Skinny Girl Diet and Ellie Rowsell of Wolf Alice. The cover features Leomie Anderson, shot at London's celebrated Notting Hill Carnival, by Tom Craig.

  • av Alejandro Cesarco
    139,-

    For our fifth issue of Space Magazine, we knocked on the doors - at home and at work -of those who refuse to follow a conventional path. On these pages, you'll find a roll call of one-of-a-kinds doing it their way. To them we raise a glass. Here's to everyone who has a terror of repetition - making it up as they go along. _x000D_Our cover star, the stylist Camille Bidault-Waddington, is just such a non-conformist. Ask fashion insiders, and they will tell you that Camille lands some of the most competitive gigs in the industry. But it's not her impressive CV that convinced us to put her on the cover - shot in Camille's Paris apartment by Casper Sejersen. Instead, it's Camille's authentic approach, looking for "real" inspiration instead of trawling Pinterest. _x000D_For our second cover, we took a trip with a raconteur. His name is Ricky Clifton, a man who texts in capital letters and calls himself THE ONLY DUMPSTER DIVER. Ricky is one of the New York art scene's true cult figures - an interior designer to the art world, decorator, florist, ceramicist, inventor, antique dealer and former taxi driver. This spring, photographer Victoria Hely-Hutchinson and set designer Julia Wagner jumped on Ricky's bandwagon, drinking tea with art power couple Helen and Brice Marden, hanging out by gallery owner David Zwirner's multi-coloured swimming pool and drinking at the hypnotic bar in Rachel Fienstein and John Currin's home. With our portraits of Camille and Ricky, we dedicated our fifth issue to the radicals, people with originality in their bones and outrageous ideas in their brains - from the worlds of design, architecture, fashion and culture. Some may be under-the-radar, others influential and recognised. But the individuals we meet in this issue all live in colour. _x000D_

  • av Sam Anderson
    169,-

  • av Natacha Polaert
    345,-

    Including:Ray JohnsonMatt ConnorsScott CovertOlivia DiVecchiaJohn FaheyRobert HawkinsRichard HellKaren KilimnikErik LaPrade (David Hammons)Nicholas MaravellMarlon MullenPeter NadinRichard Princeand William S. Wilson

  •  
    349,-

    Assemblage under quarantine: new works from the celebrated Boston School photographer and artistJack Pierson's (born 1960) latest book, New Pieces, features new assemblage works that the artist started making during quarantine in his Ridgewood, Queens, studio. Assemblage has long played a role in Pierson's career, from his early verité installation pieces to his iconic "word pieces." These new works consist mainly of items found in and around his studio building, which were then pinned directly to the wall. As Bonnie Morrison writes, "These are things that Pierson has accumulated as well as the things that have no doubt accumulated around him. To be fabricated in the year everything took on different meaning is also to take every fabricated thing's meaning different(ly)."

  •  
    519,-

    Facepots focuses on the recent ceramic work of New York-based artist Dan McCarthy (born 1962)--highly animated and emotionally charged objects formed through an immediate, hands-on process. The volume situates McCarthy's ceramics historically and includes a visual essay by the artist himself, featuring images and icons that served as inspiration.

  • av Trevor Shimizu
    299,-

    Trevor Shimizu is a multidisciplinary artist whose practice encompasses performance, video, and sculptures, yet it is his paintings and drawings, which allows him the fastest and most direct way of visualising an idea. Shimizu is primarily concerned with the generic and cliché situations of everyday life, whilst simultaneously being informed by popular media.

  • av Josh Brand
    299,-

    Josh Brand creates unique photographic objects, or photograms, through an open-ended process of darkroom experimentation. Brand exposes photographic paper to light filtered through semitransparent materials, including sheets of punctured plastic or strips of cardboard. Other works contain fragments of representational imagery culled from photographs of objects, places, and people in Brand's daily life. Brand's images reflect his commitment to photography as a way of perceiving and signifying the everyday alongside the ethereal. His approach allows for continuous improvisation and dialogue between works because, according to the artist, the "fragment of one picture is the starting point for another".

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