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Nudes/Human Form Newsletter Vol. 14

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Nudes/Human Form NewsletterNudes/Human Form Newsletter Vol. 14Volume 14 of photo-eye's Nudes/Human Form Newsletter featuring books that explore the human form in a variety of ways. Today we highlight titles from Guy Aroch, Ren Hang, Dana Stölzgen and a tintype from Keith Carter.
photo-eye's Nudes/Human Form Newsletter features books that explore the human form in a variety of ways. Sign up for the Nudes/Human Form Newsletter here.

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Morena No. 2
Guy Aroch with Lais Ribeiro
Photographs by Guy Aroch



This second issue of Morena was shot in different sessions during 2014 by Guy Aroch. Aroch is one of today's most influential fashion photographers, his photography is recognized by its plastic values and proximity, creating evocative works. Guy's editorial partners include British Vogue, Muse, Harpers Bazaar UK, Centrefold, French, British GQ , L'Officiel, The New York Times, LA Times and WWD.

Morena No.2 is the first publication to examine Aroch's photography in monograph form and is offered at the reasonable price of $25.

The first issue of Morena was shot by Henrik Purienne and released in late fall of 2014 and has sold out worldwide. photo-eye Bookstore will be able to get a very limited supply of the second issue. When supplies run out there will be no more.


photo-eye will supply each volume of Morena with a protective bag for its safe delivery and long-term retention of its value.

photo-eye is taking pre-orders for copies of Morena No.2: Guy Aroch with Lais Ribeiro. If our supplier runs out, orders will be fulfilled in the order in which they are received. The cutoff time for ordering in our shipment is Monday, August 10th at 10:00 am MDT. 

Pre-order Morena No.2 or read more


NEW ARRIVAL

New Love
Photographs by Ren Hang

Hang’s work in New Love includes casual snap shots taken of friends in parks, cafés, streets, and apartments in Brooklyn and Manhattan, smartly blended with the striking nude photos he is becoming increasingly renowned for.

Ren Hang is highly censored by the authorities in China, and the opportunity to work in New York City brought a more relaxed and playful energy to his photographs, and gave his abundant creativity new avenues of expression.

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FINAL CHANCE



My Disguise — SIGNED
Photographs by Dana Stölzgen

"My Disguise is a terse (16 page), but intimate self portrait; it is a work of human form, containing no nudes, but rather focusing on the postures and gestures of an individual; the photographer herself."— Christopher J. Johnson

My Diguise was published in a super limited run of 45 copies. photo-eye has one copy remaining and we will sell it on a first ordered first fullfilled basis.

Purchase signed book SOLD


TINTYPE


Pizza Party
Tintype by Keith Carter
8 x 10 inches, Edition of 15

From Carter's latest series Ghostland this haunting tintype is both magnetic and highly collectable.

Pizza Party is offered through photo-eye Gallery and through our Nudes/Human Form Newsletter. It is not listed within the portfolio online. $1200 unframed or $1325 framed by the artist.

For more information or to purchase prints please contact Gallery Director Anne Kelly at 505-988-5152 ext. 121 or anne@photoeye.com

View Carter's Ghostland portfolio


View past editions of the Nudes/Human Form Newsletter

Book Review: Bergen

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Book ReviewBergenBy Daniela KeiserReviewed by Adam BellDaniela Keiser’s new book Bergen offers a meditative look at a landscape framed by and infused with history. The book combines black and white photographs of the hilly parks that surround Berlin with an autobiographical text by Nadine Olonetzky. Intimately sized like a standard paperback, Keiser’s images document the landscape and the mostly young people who frolic and explore its hills and well-worn paths.


Bergen. Photographs by Daniela Keiser.
The Green Box Kunstedition, 2015.
 
Bergen
Reviewed by Adam Bell

Bergen
Photographs by Daniela Keiser
The Green Box Kunstedition, Berlin, Germany, 2015. In English/German. 128 pp., 49 illustrations, 5¼x7¾x½".


Places seem to me to have some kind of memory, in that they activate memory in those who look at them. – W.G. Sebald*

Daniela Keiser’s new book Bergen offers a meditative look at a landscape framed by and infused with history. The book combines black and white photographs of the hilly parks that surround Berlin with an autobiographical text by Nadine Olonetzky. Intimately sized like a standard paperback, Keiser’s images document the landscape and the mostly young people who frolic and explore its hills and well-worn paths. A counterpoint to Kaiser’s images, Olonetsky’s text reflects on her own attempts to live with her Jewish family’s past and the suffering they endured during WWII. As a whole, Bergen is a poetic and moving exploration about learning to live with the past, reconciling with its ghosts, and forging a new hopeful future.

Bergen. Photographs by Daniela KeiserThe Green Box Kunstedition, 2015.

The book opens with a sequence of three images of a group of teenagers playing in the park. Directly behind them, a family of three slowly moves across the frame. A teenage boy with blond hair pushes a man in a wheelchair while a woman follows closely behind. The kids are gathered in a circle and the young boys are playing with a Frisbee. The woman in the background pauses to watch them as her son continues to push the man. Further in the background we catch a glimpse of the city. Tall block-like buildings extend over the horizon and hover in the hazy sunlight. This short sequence sets the stage for remainder of the book and offers a layered portrait of the land’s mixed and revitalized use. The youth frolic in the foreground, the wounded resolutely move forward, and the rebuilt city lies in the distance.

Following this short sequence, Kaiser takes us around the periphery of the park revealing elevated views of the surrounding city and the massive apartment complexes that line its edges. Leading us in and out of the park, Kaiser’s images move from the sparsely populated interior to its outer reaches where it meets the city. Largely empty, the landscape is occasionally interrupted by shots of the park’s inhabitants, up-close or off in the distance, exploring the scar-like paths and open meadows. Midway through the book a sequence of six images of kids upside down, mid-cartwheel, presents a moment of lightness. We’re then brought to a barren and graffiti marked overlook that offers views of the city and surrounding countryside. Throughout the book, Kaiser contrasts the silent and often barren park with moments of youthful levity and the distant city.

Bergen. Photographs by Daniela KeiserThe Green Box Kunstedition, 2015.
Bergen. Photographs by Daniela KeiserThe Green Box Kunstedition, 2015.

As the book’s German title makes clear, the work is about the subtle ways in which a landscape is reclaimed and salvaged, by memories, stories, actions, and photographs. The word bergen means to recover, dig out, or reveal, and berg is a large elevated area or mountain. Both these meanings are echoed in the work. Bergen’s images alternate between the slow reclamation of the landscape by the grass and heather, and the new memories that are being formed by the hill’s youthful inhabitants. It’s important to note that both the images and Kaiser’s act of taking them are a part of this important process. Likewise, Olenetsky’s text, which parallels the images, plays a vital role and complements the images well.

Entitled “Cartwheels on the Grass,” Olenetsky’s text is presented in both German and English, and reflects on her family history and the ways we learn to live with the past. Decimated and divided by the Nazi regime, Olenetsky’s family barely survived the Holocaust and suffered greatly. Her father narrowly escaped to Switzerland, but her grandfather perished along with many other relatives. Some, like her father, were lucky and escaped or survived. Growing up, she learned to live with ghosts that were rarely mentioned. As she writes, “[my relative’s knowledge], preserved in silence, was also part of the mountain of rubble we live on.” Together the text and images form a symbiotic pair — activating each other and enriching each other’s meaning.

Bergen. Photographs by Daniela KeiserThe Green Box Kunstedition, 2015.
Bergen. Photographs by Daniela KeiserThe Green Box Kunstedition, 2015.

Short of showing actual ruins, it is often remarkably hard to reveal history in a landscape. Instead, as Sebald suggests, the land, like photographs, activates memory. There is no visible evidence of Germany’s military past in Keiser’s images. Yet beneath the scrubs, heather, and grassy fields, are bricks, rubble, and metal fragments — armaments from a war lost generations ago. Long since swallowed by time and vegetation, the fields are now a stage for recreational activity for Berlin’s population. If places have memories, they are rarely visible. Instead, they need to be conjured either through memory, language, or speech. Kaiser’s work acknowledges this absence, but points to the ways it can be revived and coexist with the present. Bergen offers a hopeful look at the ways in which a landscape and its ghosts can not only be subtly reclaimed and acknowledged, but also how new histories can be written onto the land, as well as the memories of its inhabitants.—Adam Bell

*http://www.theguardian.com/books/2001/sep/22/artsandhumanities.highereducation

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ADAM BELL is a photographer and writer. His work has been widely exhibited, and his writing and reviews have appeared in numerous publications including AfterimageThe Art Book ReviewThe Brooklyn RailfototazoFoam MagazineLay Flatphoto-eye and Paper-Journal. His books include The Education of a Photographer and the forthcoming Vision Anew: The Lens and Screen Arts. He is currently on staff and faculty at the MFA Photography, Video and Related Media Department at the School of Visual Art. (www.adambbell.com and blog.adambbell.com)


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Book of the Week: A Pick by Fred Cray

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Book of the WeekBook of the Week: A Pick by Fred CrayFred Cray selects Life is One Live it Well by Henrik Malmström as Book of the Week.
Life is One Live it Well. By Henrik Malmström.
Kominek books, 2015.
This week's Book of the Week pick comes from Fred Cray who has selected Life is One Live it Well by Henrik Malmström from Kominek books.

"Life is one live it well.

What a wonderful title; if only we did it.

This book immediately pulls me back to the summer of 2010 in Berlin where I imagined a dark cozy project could be made involving the relics, antiques, and denizens of the bars. Other well known photography books have shown how useful alcohol and bar society is to us.

Frequently I’m wanting to retreat from the daily issues and turmoil of current life especially globalization and corporate takeover. Henrik Malmström’s book allows me to vicariously situate myself in a world seemingly far away physically and time wise — in the cozy, well worn bars of Hamburg.

The crisp flash illuminates nooks and crannies of the bars, the spaces under tables and benches, the painted over or curtained over windows, and the walls with lifting paper or old stains. Wires and cobwebs run where they will. Pictures of ships and horses (things going places) punctuate the walls.

It isn’t until about half way through the book that we see a person. She interrupts our own solitude in these bars. It’s a middle aged woman in a bright red coat with her back to us running fingers coated with intense red nail polish through her blond hair. Colorful balloons, streamers, and cutouts have shown a celebration we (or perhaps everyone) missed. Turning the pages, we see more people mostly with their backs to us or faces down, likely Malmström’s empathetic protection of the bar inhabitants. These bars aren’t the frenzied crowded night clubs of the young, but the spaces of people who want to think, dream, or forget. As we move further through the book faces begin to emerge. More and more faces appear of people happy at a party that we didn’t even know we would take the time to attend."—Fred Cray

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Life is One Live it Well. By Henrik MalmströmKominek books, 2015.
Life is One Live it Well. By Henrik MalmströmKominek books, 2015.



Fred Cray is a visual artist who has lived in Brooklyn, NY for many years. He is a Guggenheim Fellow represent by Janet Borden Inc. (NY). His ongoing unique photographs project has recently led to several books, and it has a current instagram component showing placement of the photographs:
https://instagram.com/fredcrayuniquephotographs/
www.fredcray.com

View books by Fred Cray



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Interview: Elaine Ling on Baobab Tree of Generations from photo-eye EDITIONS

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photo-eye EDITIONSInterview: Elaine Ling on Baobab Tree of Generations from photo-eye EDITIONSphoto-eye Gallery is very proud to announce its fifth photo-eye EDITION publication, Baobab: Tree of Generations by Hong Kong born photographer Elaine Ling, as well as a corresponding exhibition by the same title at our Bookstore + Project Space. photo-eye EDITIONS are exquisite hand-crafted Limited Edition portfolios of contemporary photography created at photo-eye Studios in Santa Fe.
photo-eye EDITIONS – Baobab: Tree of Generations by Elaine Ling

photo-eye Gallery is very proud to announce its fifth photo-eye EDITIONS publication, Baobab: Tree of Generations by Hong Kong born photographer Elaine Ling, as well as a corresponding exhibition by the same title at our Bookstore + Project Space. photo-eye EDITIONS are exquisite hand-crafted Limited Edition portfolios of contemporary photography created at photo-eye Studios in Santa Fe. For the project, Ling traveled extensively in Africa — including expeditions to Madagascar and the province of Limpopo — to photograph the monumental tree. Recently, photo-eye Gallery's Lucas Shaffer sat down with Ling to discuss the series.

Lucas Shaffer:     Where did the inspiration for the project come from? What was your introduction to the baobab like?

Elaine Ling:     I travel to go to deserts. I hadn’t
Baobab #25, 2010 – Elaine Ling
been to the Sahara for a while, so I decided let's go to the Sahara. I picked the country of Mali.

On the way there, there was really nothing to see except occasionally a big tree sticking out all by itself. I said, "What are those?" and my guide said, "Oh, those are Baobab trees. Everybody photographs them." My guide was introduced to me by a friend in New York and told me: “Oh, Gene photographed that one and Joanne photographed that one." Then I said, "Oh my God, what am I going to do?" After a while, I decided, "You know what? I'm going to photograph them, too." That's how it started.

Then I started to research; I was interested in this tree. It turns out that it's the second biggest tree in the world. The first is the redwood. I decided to follow it and that took me to South Africa in the province of Limpopo. The rest of them, the other six, live in Madagascar – I would have to go to Madagascar too.

LS:     How many times did you travel to Africa?

EL:     For three years, three summers 2008, 2009, and 2010.

Elaine Ling
LS:     Once you decided that this would be a project, how did you go about finding the other trees?

EL:      You know they're there. You go to that area, you look at the forest, and there's this one big tree with no leaves on it. You go towards it.

Some of the trees are famous, and have been written up. But sometimes, you go look for them and you ask somebody, "Do you know this tree?" And they all go, "No. No, no, no." Finally, you find it at the end of the road. I'd say, "Well, it's right there." They go, "Oh." Sometimes people are just not aware of the trees around them — it's just something that's there for them.

LS:      Does a single person or family own the tree, or does the community collectively own it?

EL:      I don't know if anybody owns them. They know what to do with the tree so it won't kill the tree, like with the bark — they would take strips of it and leave healthy strips so the tree doesn't die. They can use the bark to build the roofs of their houses and they eat the fruit. These trees sustain them.

LS:      That’s amazing. When you say the trees sustain them, are you talking about the family, or an entire community? How many people do the trees usually support?

EL:      There's nothing that's clear-cut. A tree in a community can serve a bunch of houses, it's not quite clear. There are no fences between your house and my house. The biggest tree in Madagascar I think belonged to the village because the whole village was there when I made my photograph. I had to get permission. I had to meet this medicine man and I had to give him some form of alcohol, some matches, and some money.

He goes to the tree, he does a little ritual and he comes to me and he says, "The tree is ready to receive you." Then I was able to photograph. The whole village was watching me. I think that the revenue that they collect for this tree sustains the village.

LS:      Did you have trouble getting access to any of the trees?
Baobab #31, 2010– Elaine Ling


EL:      No, not at all. The communities were all very friendly and sometimes when I saw a whole bunch of little, little kids — some of the images have several little kids about two-feet high around the tree — I can't tell them to go away and take one. I let them all stay there because it's a very much a community thing. I got to know the communities where the trees are. You have to spend a bit of time with them, you can't just rush up and take a picture, that kind of thing.

LS:      How long does that usually take you to make an image?

EL:      It all depends. One time I saw this shepard and he wanted to have his sheep in the picture, but he had to go get his sheep. I said, "Oh, great. Go get your sheep." Half an hour later he got his sheep, but he couldn't get the sheep to go under the tree. One of the pictures has the sheep in the corner. Things like that. It could take a couple of hours, at least.

LS:      I'm sure. What goes into the decision about who gets photographed with the tree and why?

EL:      Sometimes they're there already. I wanted to include the different generations. The grandfather, grandmother, the mother with the baby, the boy and the man. I just wanted to show that this tree has accomplished all these generations.

LS:      What was important to you about that?

EL:      I'm very impressed with a tree that's a thousand years old.

People sit under the tree, first of all, because it's shaded. It's hot in Africa, so you love to sit under a big shade tree and everybody goes and sits under the biggest tree. Somehow, it's a little bit of a family place.

LS:      It's almost like a community center, the way you're framing it.

EL:      Yes, it is. Because they live outdoors most of the time.

Baobab, Tree of Generations #26, 2010– Elaine Ling

LS:      What about the decision to shoot large format camera with Type 55 Polaroid? Where did that come from?

EL:      I'm a four-by-five Polaroid Girl. I've been using Polaroid 55 for fifteen years. Since my project started with my stone book in 1997, that's what I use, that's what I can carry. I don't process it in the field. I just pull it through the rollers and process it at home. If I do want to give somebody a picture I can. I have the option of giving them a picture.

LS:      Do people usually ask for pictures? Is that something that's common?

EL:      In Mongolia, I gave them pictures because I photographed the family and they don't have cameras. They don't have pictures. In their house, they have a revere area by the mirror where they stick in family portraits, family pictures. I usually like to give them a picture and they add it to the collection. It's kind of cute.

LS:      That's great that you're image is a part of that.

EL:      But the Madagascar people, no, I don't think that they were into the pictures.

LS:      Is there anything else that you like about using Polaroid?

EL:      The film is amazing. The film handles highlight, shadow, it handles everything. I used to use Tri-X, T-Max, all this stuff. Used to do the Ansel Adams thing, two developers, and make a print. Then one day I took one of these Polaroid negatives that looks like it's really thin. I put it in and made a print. One developer. Boom. The print is gorgeous.

Baobab, Tree of Generations #13, 2009– Elaine Ling

LS:      It seems like you're photographing in challenging situations just looking at that bright, bright African sun in your images.

EL:      Yeah, and with Polaroid you can shoot in bright sun. Who cares? The trees don't care. I started shooting at high noon because everybody was doing quiet light. I learned that lesson when I was photographing the Namib Desert.

I went very early in the morning, in the quiet light, to photograph these houses with the sand dunes inside. They said that at noontime there would be a truck going by that sells coffee. I go out there, I'm the only person there. I was working, taking all these very nice pictures and it's almost noon. I thought I'd pack up and hike out to the road and get a coffee.

On the way I saw this slat, the slat shadows of the broken roof on the sand in the house. I just stopped. "Wow, my God." I took this picture, and of course missed the truck for the coffee. But then I thought, "You know what? Everything happens at noon. I don't have to get up at six anymore."

LS:      Does this particular project mean something special to you? I think anybody that invests three years of their time, obviously there's something there for them. What kept you going back?

EL:      I think once I buy into a project, I get obsessed with it. The thing is, it feels slow for me. I know where the other trees are but it takes a bit of saving money, planning, to go to a country like that — getting a driver, getting a guide and everything to do it. Three years I committed myself to this tree.

LS:      It seems very complete. I also think it's excellent that it's all in Africa.

EL:      Yeah. I thought, "Wouldn't it be kind of fun to show that the tree is somewhere else?" There are a few Baobab trees in Australia. But that's not the idea. The idea was they're born in Madagascar. That's where they came from. I'm not interested to photograph other trees, I don't do trees usually, I just don't.

LS:      How do you see the baobab portfolio sitting in with the rest of your body of work? 

EL:      It's a highlight, definitely. The trees are the highlight of my photographic work.


Baobab: Tree of Generations is currently on view at the photo-eye Bookstore + Project Space through November 7th. 

For more information about the EDITIONS portfolio, the exhibition, and to purchase prints, please contact Lucas Shaffer at 505-988-5152 x 114 or lucas@photoeye.com

View the EDITION

View the portfolio on the Photographer's Showcase

Book Review: Twenty Years

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Book ReviewTwenty YearsBy Jason LangerReviewed by George SladeHow does someone come to have assembled twenty years worth of quality photographs and mostly escape notice? (It’s twenty-seven years, based on the captions. But who’s counting?) More to the point, how does someone make a book’s worth of images echoing the work of David Heath, Roy DeCarava, Jerome Liebling, and other humanists of the 1950s and 1960s despite having been born in 1967?

Twenty YearsBy Jason Langer
Radius Books, 2015.
 
Twenty Years 
Reviewed by George Slade

Twenty Years 
Photographs by Jason Langer.
Radius Books, 2015. 172 pp., 100 color illustrations, 12x11½".


How does someone come to have assembled twenty years worth of quality photographs and mostly escape notice? (It’s twenty-seven years, based on the captions. But who’s counting?) More to the point, how does someone make a book’s worth of images echoing the work of David Heath, Roy DeCarava, Jerome Liebling, and other humanists of the 1950s and 1960s despite having been born in 1967? Not only are there no mobile phones or cell towers, no web URLs or video screens, and no apparent post-Modernist architecture to be found in the subject matter, there seems to be a distinct absence of irony, cynicism, or Gen-X pessimism to be found in the execution of the work. Even Times Square, photographed during the evening rush-to-theater on a fall or winter day (when darkness falls before the curtains rise), appears dressed in clothes from a distinctly pre-digital — heck, pre-Carter — era. And, to top it all off, a fine set of reproductions notwithstanding, Langer’s gallerist insists in an afterword that we cannot judge the work until we’ve seen it in print form.

Twenty YearsBy Jason LangerRadius Books, 2015.

What world does Langer occupy? What environs has he summoned for our viewing? Is this the Limelight Gallery? The Museum of Modern Art? W. Eugene Smith’s jazz-and-smoke-filled loft in lower Manhattan? Some Greenwich Village coffee shop full of Beat Generation phantoms? Aperture’s offices dancing to the beat of Minor White?

To put my reactions in one word: Bravo. To add a few more words and references, I’d say that Langer inherited the economical symbolism of a Ralph Gibson or Nathan Lyons crossed with the direct, sensual purity of an Edouard Boubat, Ed Van der Elsken, or Christer Strömholm.

Twenty YearsBy Jason LangerRadius Books, 2015.

I’ve left female influences out of Langer’s image antecedents; not because there aren’t any, but because there’s a particular longing in these photographs that feels very male, at least to this male. Women’s hands reaching around a man’s neck or laying on his shoulder, lithe lower legs drawing their flowing lines against pavement, a perfectly casual bow of a waitress’ apron, white and black at the base of her spine, and the arranged, partially-clad beauties that constitute a numbered series of “Figure” studies sprinkled throughout the book.

Twenty YearsBy Jason LangerRadius Books, 2015.

In a decision that may be the only tipping of a generational hat, the only clue that the photographer might live in the world and time of Ryan McGinley and Alec Soth, Langer gives comparable exposure to unclad male figures in his photography. No coy subtitles, no differentiation between female and male in the numbered series. And, best of all, no hesitancy to allow men’s bodies an expressiveness that has little to do with sexuality or massively scaled musculature. The figure studies of both genders echo a sensibility receptive to universal timbres of desire for touch and alienation resulting from its absence. Numerous images reflect well-rendered versions of the city’s inhumanity to man, the solo human form apparently stable but practically swallowed up in the enormity of the built environment.

Twenty YearsBy Jason LangerRadius Books, 2015.

The book’s edit, which one unfamiliar with Langer’s work must take as a core sample of the photographer’s oeuvre, favors anonymity, at least among the living, and gesture as human quintessence. There are several haunting images of simulacra — body parts on the wall of St. Roch’s shrine in New Orleans, religious and medical sculptures of bodies, a mudra (a hand gesture familiar in Buddhist and Hindu statuary, ceremonies, and dance) photographically extracted from a marble statue in the Louvre, and, on adjoining pages, skulls in a catacomb and an ominous, skulking, damaged parade float addressing the eternal moment. In a beautiful about face, an exception graciously affirming the rule, a photo titled Mudra shows a woman’s face and head thrown back in full rapture, hands out of sight somewhere near her midsection, gesturing in what we must imagine to be at least a physical, if not spiritual, moment of transcendence.

There are many outstanding images in this collection, and I am pleased to have encountered them. Langer’s name should be better known. This book should help accomplish that.—GEORGE SLADE

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GEORGE SLADE, a longtime contributor to photo-eye, is a photography writer, curator, historian and consultant. He can be found online at http://rephotographica-slade.blogspot.com/

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In Stock at photo-eye Bookstore: Signed

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BooksIn Stock at photo-eye: SignedSigned titles from Rob Hornstra, Giles Cassels, Fred Cray and Laurent Chardon, all in stock at photo-eye Bookstore.

Kiev
By Rob Hornstra
The Sochi Project

Selected as one of the Best Books of 2012 by:
Jonathan Blaustein
Pierre Bessard
Sputnik Photos

"Sketchbook Series # 03 -The Sochi Project’s third Sketchbook depicts Sochi in the summer as well as being an ode to analogue photography. In the summer of 2011, Rob fell in love with a 40-year-old KIEV medium-format camera, which a friend gave him as a gift in the Russian resort of Sochi. Over the following days, he roamed the city with his new acquisition and photographed things that he had never seen before through the lens of his Mamiya camera. When he got home and developed the films, he found that the KIEV’s film transport system was defective."—the publisher

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Nightfall 
Photographs by Giles Cassels
Self-Published

"Nightfall captures the humble, banal moments I encounter in my hours awake, and reassembles them to draw out their greater significance as the personal, spiritual, and cultural signifiers that creep into and darken the narratives of my dreams. These dreams then subtly inform how I see the world awake, looping dream life and waking life together, until which exacts a greater toll becomes indistinguishable from the other."—the publisher

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Cray Cray
Photographs by Fred Cray
64

"Cray Cray continues Fred Cray's work with unique photographs. This book contains 36 double printed images all of which use the same self-portrait as a constant.

This edition is limited to 100 numbered copies (and a few collector's copies), and each copy comes with at least one unique 4"x6" double printed self-portrait."—the publisher

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Dédale
Photographs by Laurent Chardon
Poursuite

"Laurent Chardon's Dédale includes various series of photographs taken between the years 2003 to 2013 and documents a Paris and its surroundings in transformation.

As if indicated by the legend, Daedalus is the inventor of architecture and sculpture, the new Paris area that draws us here no longer makes any distinction between Paris and its suburbs."—the publisher

Book Review: Boiko

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Book ReviewBoikoBy Jan BrykczynskiReviewed by Christopher J JohnsonJan Brykczynski, whose work I've reviewed before in Sputnik's Distant Place and Standby anthologies, is often interested in themes of displacement, disuse and detachment.

Boiko. By Jan Brykczynski.
Self-published, 2014.
 
Boiko
Reviewed by Christopher J. Johnson

Boiko
Photographs by Jan Brykczynski. Text by Taras Prokhas’ko.
Self-published, Warsaw, 2014. In English, Ukrainian and Poli. 46 pp., 37 four-color illustrations, 23x21".


Jan Brykczynski, whose work I've reviewed before in Sputnik's Distant Place and Standby anthologies, is often interested in themes of displacement, disuse and detachment. There is both a starkness and a repetition in all of his series thus far; in Distance Place his section was titled Mission Completed and featured a series of ships that had long since been taken from the water and turned into habitations or left to weather along the Vestula river; in Standby his series Primary Forest exclusively features the aging interiors of rural Polish/Belarusian forest homes — each interior features a taxidermy or folk-art animal as if to single the loss of connection between the forest and its animals and the absence of a younger generation — those who would fix up the rooms and make them their own.

Boiko. By Jan Brykczynski. Self-published, 2014.

Boiko is a little of the same, but mostly quiet different in its approach to Brykczynski's common themes. Boiko is a more colorful work than any I have seen from him before. The colors have a specific use, embellishing the people and the interiors of their homes while the woods, the dead hogs, the frozen rivers and the blue-grey skies are the underscored color-set familiar to Brykczynski's work. This brings life into the communities of these depopulated rural places, adding to them a sense of deepness and lushness. Set against the more drably represented world outside and its chores, Brykczynski's people come alive in a charming and mysterious way and almost seem to step from their rural reality into an imagined world of myth and folklore or to occupy a dream of rural life.

Boiko. By Jan Brykczynski. Self-published, 2014.

Boiko is an important term to know for this book, here it is explained by Wikipedia: “Boyko or Boiko or simply Highlanders are a Ukrainian ethnographic group located in the Carpathian Mountains of Ukraine and Poland... Boykos differ from their neighbors in dialect, dress, folk architecture, and customs.” It is a small group with esoteric traditions rooted in Eastern Orthodox strands of Christianity and influenced by Slavic language and culture. They keep to themselves and, because of this, they have retained much of their culture instead of loosing it to an urban exodus.

Brykczynski takes us through their communal lives — their rituals and vibrancy, their traditions which seem unspoiled in these images: the slaughter of animals, a wake, a shrine to the Virgin Mary within a residential home. It is a culture that is just as rich as ever and seems not to have diminished; there are no televisions or radios and the one image where a car is present seems out of place amidst the sleighs and sleds and carts common to the book's other images.

Boiko. By Jan Brykczynski. Self-published, 2014.

It is as though Brykczynski went from showing the decay of rural life in his previous publications to showing us one of its more thriving communities; it is the opposite end of his regular scale (though by no means a commonplace sociologically). Boiko is a work that examines joy and roots and the slow change of a culture that is insular and, as Brykczynski himself is part Boiko, it is also a work of love.

Boiko. By Jan Brykczynski. Self-published, 2014.

Insofar as understanding Jan Brykczynski as an artist, this monograph perhaps makes more clear than any of his previous works where he's coming from and why the rural is a central theme; it is his navel, his origin, and it suits him. Perhaps more clearly than any other of the photographers to arise out of the Sputnik collective, Brykczynski's work conveys a sense of the national, not on the large-scale, but on the more micro-scale. In Boiko he allows himself to examine these micro-cultures and communities to his heart's content and with a great effect, resulting in something like warmth itself.

Boiko. By Jan Brykczynski. Self-published, 2014.

The book as object is very beautifully designed with an embossed cover in white cloth and a magnetic clasp to keep the book closed, which, perhaps not intentionally so, gives the book a sense of the very personal, like a diary. If you've like the desolation of Brykczynski's previous work, Boiko might not be what you're looking for; however if you like examinations of micro-communities, Eastern European culture or the work that has come out of the Sputnik collective in general, Boiko will please beyond your expectations.—CHRISTOPHER J. JOHNSON

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CHRISTOPHER J. JOHNSON is an artist, radio host, and poet living in Santa Fe, New Mexico. His reviews, interviews, and essays on poetry can be read in the Philadelphia Review of Books. Johnson also hosts the radio program Collected Words on 101.5 KVSF, where he interviews authors, poets and artists.

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Book of the Week: Antony Cairns

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Book of the WeekBook of the Week: A Pick by Antony CairnsAntony Cairns selects In Order of Appearance… by Kalev Erickson as Book of the Week.
In Order of Appearance…Produced by Kalev Erickson.
Archive of Modern Conflict, 2015.
This week's Book of the Week pick comes from Antony Cairns who has selected In Order of Appearance… produced by Kalev Erickson from Archive of Modern Conflict.

"Kalev Erickson recreates an exact replica of an album found on the shelves of the Archive of Modern Conflict for his new book, In Order of Appearance..., 15 c-type prints inserted in a spiral album. Edition 100 copies. The album tells the story without words of an adventure on a street in London involving a blue Reliant Robin (3-wheeler car), an elephant, Santa Claus and the characters from PG Tips (a famous British tea manufacture). No date is found in the album but it seems to have happened at some point in the 1980s. Why the event took place and what exactly is going on is not clear. The interest of the album in my opinion comes from the novice approach taken in its making. It's a failed piece of documentation yet at the same time it is a record of something that you couldn’t dream up. It seems artists are using found images more and more within photography books and projects yet their approach is often to take the images out of the original context and reappropriate them for their own concepts and clever little ideas. Here it is different; Erickson spotted that the album itself, as it has been created by its unknown maker, is a small oddity that deserved to be reproduced and made available for others to see and not just left to live on a shelf in a basement of a slightly reclusive archive."—Antony Cairns

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In Order of Appearance… Produced by Kalev Erickson. Archive of Modern Conflict, 2015.
In Order of Appearance… Produced by Kalev Erickson. Archive of Modern Conflict, 2015.

Antony Cairns is a London based photographer who specialises in experimenting with traditional chemical based photographic techniques. He is continually working on his series LDN, which is a simple London by night work that becomes abstracted the process he creates whilst in the darkroom. He has shown his works at a variety of photographic galleries and venues including Rencontre d’arles in 2013 and Unseen amsterdam 2014.
http://antony-cairns.co.uk

View books by Antony Cairns




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Opening Friday August 28th: Michael Lange – WALD | FLUSS

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photo-eye GalleryOpening Friday August 28th: Michael Lange – WALD | FLUSSphoto-eye Gallery is excited to announce WALD | FLUSS, an exhibition of large format color landscape images by German photographer Michael Lange. This is Lange’s inaugural solo exhibition in the United States and photo-eye is proud to debut a selection of photographs from his series FLUSS, recently published as a monograph by Hatje Cantz, as well as photographs from is previous body of work WALD.

WALD #2016, 2010© Michael Lange

Exhibition Dates: August 28 – October 17, 2015
Opening, Artist Reception, and Book Signing: Friday August, 28 from 5–7 pm
photo-eye Gallery, 541 S. Guadalupe Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501

photo-eye Gallery is excited to announce WALD | FLUSS, an exhibition of large format color landscape images by German photographer Michael Lange. This is Lange’s inaugural solo exhibition in the United States and photo-eye is proud to debut a selection of photographs from his series FLUSS, recently published as a monograph by Hatje Cantz, as well as photographs from is previous body of work WALD. Lange will be in attendance at the exhibition opening on Friday, August 28th, and will be signing copies of his books from 5–7 PM.

FLUSS #R3498, 2012© Michael Lange

WALD, German for woods, focuses on the forest as a symbolic and emotional location. The etymology of wald finds its root in the word ‘wild,’ — uninhabited, untamed, or unrestrained. Lange’s invitingly eerie landscapes wholeheartedly embrace this notion, capturing the primordial essence of the forest as a place of wonder, peril, and promise. WALD is the forest of fairy tale — subdued, silvery, and luminescent, the hushed scenes in WALD vibrate with sublime anticipation. FLUSS, German for river, is a similar interpretation of the Rhine photographed over a three-year period. According to Lange: “My images express a longing for pacification, depth, and beauty — the desire to lose one self. A part of my work is to trace the unceasing process of change until a landscape is in harmony with the internal images that express my feelings.” Dr. Christian Stahl in his discussion of FLUSS notes: “With all its lightness and beauty the apparently motionless surfaces of the water suggest hidden depths below. In the breath-taking, abstract detail of its agitated surfaces, the river … unfolds its entire driving and formative power. The finest gradations of tone and color produce compositions of atmospheric intensity and distilled clarity.”

WALD | Landscapes of Memory #2504 © Michael Lange
Michael Lange is a self-taught photographer who has exhibited extensively in Europe including Robert Morat Galerie, Hamburg, Alfred Ehrhardt Foundation, Berlin, Photofest "La Gacilly," France, Art Cologne and has received grants from both the Culture Foundation, Bonn, and the Kulturfonds VG BildKunst. His monographs include WALD, 2012, and FLUSS, 2015 both published by Hatje Cantz. Michael Lange currently lives and works in Hamburg, Germany.

View the WALD portfolio

For more information, and to purchase prints please contact Gallery Director, Anne Kelly at 505-988-5152 x 121 or anne@photoeye.com.

Book Review: Detroit: Unbroken Down

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Book ReviewDetroit: Unbroken DownBy Dave JordanoReviewed by George SladeOne of the ways photography lies to us — one of its most subtle yet impactful ways — is through its relationship with color. When we look at a photographic print or a halftone reproduction rendered in color, it’s important to remember that the presentation of those colors is the net result of various subjective decisions made in the steps from real life into captured matrix into output file into final form.

Detroit: Unbroken DownBy Dave Jordano
powerHouse Books, 2015.
 
Detroit: Unbroken Down
Reviewed by George Slade

Detroit: Unbroken Down
Photographs by Dave Jordano. Text by Dawoud Bey, Nancy Watson Barr and Sharon Zukin.
powerHouse Books, New York, 2015. In English. 160 pp., 12¼x10¼".


One of the ways photography lies to us — one of its most subtle yet impactful ways — is through its relationship with color. When we look at a photographic print or a halftone reproduction rendered in color, it’s important to remember that the presentation of those colors is the net result of various subjective decisions made in the steps from real life into captured matrix into output file into final form.

Unlike black-and-white images, color works are not immediately obvious abstractions. Color photographs clearly mirror life. Don’t they? Honestly, no. Very few photographers take a color reference chart with them to insure that what they saw is what you get. All images result from diddling with hues, tints, contrast, saturation, and so on. Those nuanced decisions are based on both desired outcomes and recalled impressions. Memory of color affects production, and reproduction, of color. Emotions affect memory. And where emotions come from is a question above my pay grade. Nonetheless, an artist’s emotions and memories play a significant role when generating the colors an audience sees.

Detroit: Unbroken DownBy Dave JordanopowerHouse Books, 2015.

I dwell on this because Dave Jordano’s photographs seem tinged with both memory and hope. He sees Detroit in two lights. One is the city as his birthplace, a battered city that is still fighting. The other is the city as a fatally wounded place, one that conventional wisdom has relegated to the ash heap, a fate Jordano refuses to accept. “These photographs are my reaction to all the negative press that Detroit has had to endure over the years,” Jordano explains in a refreshingly forthcoming foreword. After being away from his hometown for over three decades, “I wanted to see for myself what everyone was talking about.”

Detroit: Unbroken DownBy Dave JordanopowerHouse Books, 2015.

His first inclination was to dwell on the wounds, the evidence of wreck and despair—“the same subjects that other photographers were interested in” and had published widely. “Detroit ruin porn,” as Dawoud Bey calls this example of photographic expediency in an opening dialogue with Jordano. Bey recalls the pre-figured impulses followed by reporters in New Orleans a decade ago, redrawing muddy-floored churches, decayed family photographs, houses atop cars, and the patois of survivor graffiti in the months after Katrina. Similar tropes evolved in Detroit; Jordano saw and transcended them.

On formal terms, there appear to be two different palettes at work in many of this book’s images. Vivid foregrounds are set against nature’s saturated greens or man’s grimy duns and greasy ochres. There is, as I suggested at the outset, an emotional investment in the foreground colors, worn by and identifying people who stand out from and will not be camouflaged or swallowed up by their surroundings: Carrie, leaning forward in a striped blue shirt, radiant lipstick, and shadowy, close-cropped hair, nearly projects herself out of the picture and into the viewer’s space; Ejaz, wearing a bushy orange beard that is outdone by the flaming zig-zag pattern of his shirt; Jerome, clad head to ankles in iridescent mango velour. People of color, to be sure. Were these chromatic exclamation points central to Jordano’s successful progress?

Detroit: Unbroken DownBy Dave JordanopowerHouse Books, 2015.

Over the years I have weighed the notion of a documentary style I have called “civic.” Its principal feature is a visual exploration of the civilian ethos constituting a community. As I envision Jordano traveling the streets of Detroit and making photographs along the way, I try to assess what draws his interest. “I make no excuses,” Jordano says, “about where I’ve concentrated my efforts, which are in the more economically distressed neighborhoods of the city.” What specific elements made him stop? That contrast of colors, foreground versus background, seems to be one hook. I should note that the human subject isn’t always the more colorful of the picture’s planes; the man walking in front of a bright yellow wall for instance, or Arthur, nearly invisible in the window of his candy-festooned storefront. He also steps back for the occasional establishing shot; his images of scruffy backyard basketball, a man harvesting his burgeoning garden, police cadets training in an abandoned dollar store’s parking lot, and a sidewalk cricket game in a Bangladeshi neighborhood provide a multi-dimensional sense of context. The Detroit that evolves in Jordano’s photographs plays, grows, aspires — and occasionally sleeps, in a few oddly intimate images.

For this viewer, a couple of the book’s strongest images are ones that display a continuity between figure and ground: A blues guitar man in his comfy chair; Cookie, one of the Goldengate settlers; Brad, excavating scrap metal; and, above all, Hakeem, whose two images are studies in brown and black, presence and absence, positivity and place. I must admit, too, that I am smitten by Micah, whose indescribable hair against a tree’s green canopy beautifully spoils the otherwise elegant blending of her torso and the surrounding built environment. Her image seems perhaps the most future-oriented, optimistic portrait in the book.

Detroit: Unbroken DownBy Dave JordanopowerHouse Books, 2015.

If I must kvetsch about something related to this book, I will say that some great books have great titles, while others, not so much. As a title, Detroit: Unbroken Down is troubling and confusing to me. It sat too heavily on my shoulder as I engaged with the photographs, challenging each image to address the question: Does this show unbroken-down Detroit? Do these images collectively demonstrate that Detroit is not broken down? Honestly, no. On the whole, the hard road that precedes and likely follows each portrait encounter is manifest. There is life in these images, and a modicum of hope based on faith in the human spirit. But the title implies something transcendent, even redemptive. By itself, “unbroken” is a useful idea; combined with “down” it poses conceptual challenges and a negative predisposition that is untrue to the photography.

Detroit: Unbroken DownBy Dave JordanopowerHouse Books, 2015.

There is strife in this civic documentary record, but it is set against fairness, charity, and pervasive respect. The crises of poverty, senseless death, and homelessness are evident but so is a bohemian industriousness that is revivifying abandoned houses along Goldengate Street, repairing bicycles, holding music festivals, and growing vegetables in scores of urban gardens. The photographer’s humanist ethos emerges in the well-constructed dialogue with photographer Dawoud Bey, cited earlier, which opens the book. Jordano’s stance is mature and measured. In contrast to the abundance of centripetal, self-iterating “abandonment photography” in Detroit, Jordano sought to depict some of the 700,000 people still at home, occupying still-functional neighborhoods. “I felt that perhaps I could make a difference and change the perception of what others thought of Detroit,” he said to Bey. “It was important to me to create a balance by tipping the scale in the other direction towards what I thought was a more compassionate and understanding view of what the city was really like.”

Detroit: Unbroken DownBy Dave JordanopowerHouse Books, 2015.

Maybe the redemptive quality of the book’s title is, in fact, intended. Jordano’s collective portrait of a city rebuilding itself citizen by citizen, block by block, and neighborhood by neighborhood sounds a reveille, not a dirge. And that is a welcome change of tone.—GEORGE SLADE

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GEORGE SLADE, a longtime contributor to photo-eye, is a photography writer, curator, historian and consultant. He can be found online at http://rephotographica-slade.blogspot.com/

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Book of the Week: A Pick by Daniel Boetker-Smith

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Book of the WeekBook of the Week: A Pick by Daniel Boetker-SmithDaniel Boetker-Smith selects Incipient Strangers by Yoshikatsu Fujii as Book of the Week.
Incipient Strangers. By Yoshikatsu Fujii.
Self-published, 2015.
This week's Book of the Week pick comes from Daniel Boetker-Smith who has selected Incipient Strangers self-published by Yoshikatsu Fujii.

"In March this year Yoshikatsu Fujii released Incipient Strangers, his follow up to his hugely successful 2014 book Red String.

Red String, his first book, was shortlisted for a number of international prizes, and gained Fujii a reputation for being a unique voice in the photobook world. In an edition of just 35, Red String utilized a number of highly original physical and material devices to guide the reader, and enhance the experience of the images in line with the narrative being explored; a simple one — the divorce of his parents.

Earlier this year Fujii faced up to the photographic equivalent of his ‘difficult second album’ and published his sequel to Red String, Incipient Strangers, again with the help of Yumi Goto, Director of Reminders Photography Stronghold, Tokyo.

Whereas Red String’s felt covering is delicate and romantic and draws you in with its gentle textures and tones, Incipient Strangers is constructed to be large and unwieldy. Where Red String was simple, a divide down the middle suggested the telling of two equal but opposing stories, in this latest book there is none of that clarity or ease of passage through the book. Incipient Strangers is A3, and has a soft cover, which means it’s hard to hold, it flops about in your hands. It is also, importantly, unbound, which means in addition to all of the above, it falls apart in your hands as you flick through. Fujii uses two or three different paper stocks, and mixes up the printing in black and white and color throughout, which again presses home this feeling of awkwardness. Fujii’s intent was to explore his family as if they were strangers, and subsequently this study is much messier and unruly — as a result there is no sense of melancholy here as there is in Red String. Incipient Strangers promotes the feeling of confusion, of strangeness and of a story that is too complex, spans too much time, and contains too much pain to ever be resolved; this is a story of a family fallen apart, and what remains is brittle and fragile, and will always be fragmented.

The construction of a large photobook, such as this, with loose folded sheets, creates this desired experience of fragility in me as I flick through; the book slips and falls away as I turn the pages. Specifically, there is a way your eyes move through this book that goes back and forth from left page to right page, knowing they don’t belong together, but trying to make sense of them anyway; you lift up the pages to peer underneath to see the other side of the image, to see how it adds or subtracts from what you already think you know. And sometimes the other half of an image you saw earlier rings true later in the book paired with another disconnected image. The way the disparate images work together is sublime, and this feels remarkably accomplished; rereading of this book offers more and more clues each time, and reminds us of the complex nature of connection to those people who know us so well. Fujii’s second book doesn’t look as pretty as the first, but it packs more of a punch."—Daniel Boetker-Smith

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Incipient Strangers. By Yoshikatsu Fujii. Self-published, 2015.
Incipient Strangers. By Yoshikatsu Fujii. Self-published, 2015.

Daniel Boetker-Smith is a writer, curator, educator and artist. He is the Director of the Asia-Pacific Photobook Archive, a not-for-profit organization established in 2013 to promote and share the books of photographers from the Asia-Pacific region internationally, and to encourage the production of more photobooks in that region. He has organized photobook events at festivals, galleries, and institutions all over the world. He was a judge at the Kassel Photobook Awards in 2013. He is also co-ordinator of the Asia-Pacific Photobook Prize and a Founder of Photobook Melbourne (2015), the only international photobook festival in the Asia-Pacific region. Daniel is also the Course Director at the Photography Studies College, Melbourne, Australia.


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Portfolios: Michael Lange's WALD and FLUSS

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photo-eye GalleryPortfolios: Michael Lange's WALD and FLUSS photo-eye Gallery is excited to open WALD/FLUSS, an exhibition of landscape photographs from Michael Lange opening on Friday, August 28th. Lange will be in attendance signing copies of his two books WALD and FLUSS, both published by Hatje Cantz.
WALD | Landscapes of Memory #6678- Michael Lange

photo-eye Gallery is excited to open WALD/FLUSS, an exhibition of landscape photographs from German photographer Michael Lange. Opening on Friday, August 28th, the photo-eye Gallery exhibition is his first solo show in the United States. Lange will be in attendance signing copies of his two books WALD and FLUSS, both published by Hatje Cantz.

Translating to “forest” and “river,” the large format color photographs of WALD/FLUSS explore the natural world with compelling subtly and particular interest in the capacity of these landscapes to act as conduit for the human subconscious. In both series one is struck with the sensation of encountering these landscapes on one’s own, existing in the presence of the wild and untamed, the constant force of change in the landscape.

R2689, 2012- Michael Lange

Speaking with Erin Azouz in 2014, Lange described the origins of the WALD series like this: “All together WALD was a slow process, a kind of incremental. This was my first landscape project. A personal approach was needed, a photographic language demanded. So over weeks and month I literally let myself get lost deeper and deeper into the woods and tried many different techniques, perspectives and approaches.”

WALD | Landscapes of Memory #0252- Michael Lange
The technique that Lange settled on for these photographs is striking. Photographing in low light, the images take on an unusual almost other-worldly quality: “In the transition from dark to dawn, nature is like a hidden beauty wrapped in a gloomy silken paper. It is light years away from a forest in sunlight. A similar effect happens in twilight, on a dark rainy day, with mist or fog. The landscape gets transformed in a magical way one often can't predict. A shallow situation might change drastically into a dramatic one and reveal a depth and fullness one could not imagine. “

Transitioning from the forest to the river, Lange felt an instant attraction to this new landscape as well as a recognition of its representational and figurative reach: “I was instantly fascinated by the wild, jungle-like landscape. The lonely harshness of the almost rejecting winter nature attracted me strongly. I could see a deep beauty in the dripping colorlessness and dark desolation and I loved it from the very first moment. It was a perfect piece of art in its own, nothing missing.”

R3498, 2012- Michael Lange
“The power of the fast running water in the channel is almost physical. It is dangerous, deep and impenetrable — unfathomable due to the swift flow and permanent flux of the surface with nothing to hold on to. It's like a call for hidden and subconscious feelings. These two different worlds, depending and coexisting partners, one wild and raw the other seemingly tamed — are what have kept me coming back.”

Soft and painterly, the images in WALD and FLUSS possess an atmospheric aspect akin to memory. Presented side by side, these two bodies of work present a vision of the natural world both dichotomous in the variation of stillness and movement and unified in their deft conjuring of interior spaces. The images of WALD and FLUSS seem especially reflection of the internal landscape, resonant with feelings that are deeply known if impossible to articulate.


View the WALD portfolio
View FLUSS portfolio

Read Erin Azouz's interview with Lange on WALD
Read Erin Azouz's interview with Lange on FLUSS





Purchase a signed copy of the book WALD
Purchase a signed copy of the book FLUSS

For more information, and to purchase prints please contact Gallery Director Anne Kelly at 505-988-5152 x 121 or anne@photoeye.com 

Book Review: ON

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Book ReviewONBy Eamonn DoyleReviewed by Colin PantallEammon Doyle’s first photobook, i, made street photography personal. That’s a strange thing to say of a book that consisted of high-angle pictures of the backs of Dublin’s elderly pedestrians. In i, the street was reduced to sidewalk and roadway, the minimal textures of the tarmac and concrete echoed by those of the headscarves and coats that Doyle’s subjects wore.

ON. By Eamonn Doyle.
Self-published, 2015.
 
ON
Reviewed by Colin Pantall

ON
Photographs by Eamonn Doyle
Self-published, Luxembourg, Belgium, 2015. In English. 104 pp., 51 Black & White tritone printed illustrations printed on Lessebo design naturel 150 gm paper.  


Eammon Doyle’s first photobook, i, made street photography personal. That’s a strange thing to say of a book that consisted of high-angle pictures of the backs of Dublin’s elderly pedestrians. In i, the street was reduced to sidewalk and roadway, the minimal textures of the tarmac and concrete echoed by those of the headscarves and coats that Doyle’s subjects wore. i was a homage to the old people of Dublin, an Eleanor Rigby of our times with worn wool and hunched backs providing the peg on which we could hide out empathy.

ON. By Eamonn Doyle. Self-published, 2015.

I remember looking at i and then walking the streets of Bristol, Bath and Brussels. And there I’d see them again, all these old people with those same hunched backs and headscarves that they were wearing in Dublin. When you start seeing the pictures for yourself, that’s when you know a photographer is hitting a sweet spot.

When Doyle published his second book, ON, the guess was that he would continue down this path of street minimalism, that he would continue to focus on the details of dress and poise, the public presentations of self, that reveal so much of who one wants to be and who one ends up being.

ON. By Eamonn Doyle. Self-published, 2015.

But no such luck. Instead ON is a return to the Street with a capital S. It’s Street Photography writ large, with more than a nod towards the great street work of Klein, Moriayama and Gilden.

To that end, it’s shot using a variety of strategies; low-shot panoramas capturing both figure and background and straighter, longer shots isolating heads against walls and buildings. There are close-ups, crops, diagonals and a slightly overcooked feel to it all, the sense that someone was cranking the channel settings way too far down the scale on Photoshop, Lightroom or Camera Raw.

But Doyle is not shy of the grand gesture and maybe that is what helps him get away with it. It’s quite an ambitious book, and it has a grandness to it. The grandness starts with the size of the book (it’s big) and continues with the cover (you can have red, green or blue — all with a foil-stamped paper-cut-like design).

ON. By Eamonn Doyle. Self-published, 2015.

And then the book starts, with a simple shot of 3 young men walking down a Dublin street. One wears a Liverpool jacket, another is shaven-headed with big muscles and the third is of East Asian origin but dressed in track pants and jacket that are straight out of the Sports Direct line of budget clothing. He might look Asian, but he’s dressed like Dublin.

And that’s the message throughout the book. This isn’t i, where nearly all the photographs were of white working class men and women. It’s the new Dublin, one where Trinity students walk the same streets as Somalis, Pakistanis and Kurds. Young seagulls (a street trope if ever there was one) fly overhead and the new ways come to town. And the City of Dublin comes to them and embraces them, enfolds them and makes them, however awkwardly (or not – we don’t really know), its own.

ON. By Eamonn Doyle. Self-published, 2015.

ON presents the cosmopolitan side of the city’s streets; there are students, there are tourists, there are migrants and there are refugees in there, each walking to a slightly different beat. And mixed in with them is a little bit of what appears to be an old Ireland (if such a thing exists and maybe that is what Doyle is questioning); the droopy jowled man with the heavy lids who smokes a cigarette, the battered face of the short-haired man inspecting his nails, and in one of several references back to i, the lady clutching her headscarf as she looks down at the crouching Doyle.

ON. By Eamonn Doyle. Self-published, 2015.

Of course all of this is just a guessing game. I have no clue who or where the people in the book come from and I have no idea of the demographics of Dublin. But part of the fun is from guessing, and that is what Doyle begs us to do. So in my imagination I spot people of Polish, Greek, Pakistani, Kurdish, Egyptian, Sudanese, Somali, Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese, Congolese, Nepali, Sierra Leonean, Bengali, English, Caribbean and Thai backgrounds.

So it’s a book of street photography with a visual (and limited) documentary element that portrays a new Dublin, a Dublin that is of new arrivals who are now living and settling in the city. He’s telling a story here and in that story he also connects back to i through visual connections that reprise the textures of Doyle’s first book. There are fleshy arms and bare backs, all freckled as they should be, there are stretching legs and the patterns of skirt and headscarf and hat. And there is a similar consideration of dress, class and the material structure of street.

ON. By Eamonn Doyle. Self-published, 2015.

ON doesn’t have the visual purity of i. In some ways it looks like a series of different projects put together. But at the same time, it is striking out into something altogether more ambitious; street photography that captures a mood and a time and works both with and against expectations, a book where photography, demographics and global politics come together.—COLIN PANTALL

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COLIN PANTALL is a UK-based writer and photographer. He is a contributing writer for the British Journal of Photography and a Senior Lecturer in Photography at the University of Wales, Newport. http://colinpantall.blogspot.com

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Book Review: Some Thing Means Everything for Somebody

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Book ReviewSome Thing Means Everything for SomebodyPhotographs by Peter MitchellReviewed by Karen JenkinsPeter Mitchell wants to believe that the treasures entombed with Tutankhamun to serve him in the afterlife exercised a sentimental power over the boy king; chosen for something more than their promise of future utility. That Mitchell himself is held sway by a lifetime’s cherished objects, of both practical value and symbolic weight, is quickly evident within his new book.
Some Thing Means Everything for SomebodyBy Peter Mitchell
RRB Publishing, 2015.
 
Some Thing Means Everything for Somebody
Reviewed by Karen Jenkins

Some Thing Means Everything for Somebody
Photographs by Peter Mitchell
RRB Publishing, Bristol, England, 2015. In English. 132 pp., 124 four-color illustrations, 9x11".


Peter Mitchell wants to believe that the treasures entombed with Tutankhamun to serve him in the afterlife exercised a sentimental power over the boy king; chosen for something more than their promise of future utility. That Mitchell himself is held sway by a lifetime’s cherished objects, of both practical value and symbolic weight, is quickly evident within his new book, Some Thing Means Everything to Somebody. He writes in the introduction: “the possessions Tutankhamun put aside for the future made him a king; the possessions you see before you made me a photographer.” The mementos and markers collected in this volume narrate boyhood adventures and family ties, academic firsts and artistic achievements. But they don’t do it alone; each curated page is paired with photographs of scarecrows guarding the fields of Mitchell’s native Yorkshire in northern England. These figures (which he calls ‘friends’) have been part of the photographer’s story since 1974, when he was working as a truck driver and about to have his first one-man show. Like Mitchell’s architectural views of Leeds begun at the same time (recently published as Strangely Familiar), these scarecrows are wonderfully rooted and yet other-worldly sentries of home.

Some Thing Means Everything for SomebodyBy Peter Mitchell. RRB Publishing, 2015.
Some Thing Means Everything for SomebodyBy Peter Mitchell. RRB Publishing, 2015.

Through the strength of Mitchell’s vision, what at first seems a peculiar pairing becomes a steadfast symbiosis. In part, the scarecrows are a means to explore the emotional content and formal aspects of Mitchell’s catalogue of objects appearing opposite them in each spread. In the 1950s, their exuberance and heroic stance mirrors Mitchell’s imaginative wanderings via model planes and I-spy volumes. Nuclear disarmament handouts are more disconcerting in their placement across from a vertiginous horizon, hazy skies and a bloated, especially inert scarecrow. Some pairings are straightforwardly playful, such as the magic coal electric fireplace facing a scarecrow seated in a snowy landscape. The juxtaposition of Mitchell’s business card, a vintage typewriter and a mid-century chair with the book’s only non-anthropomorphic scarecrow – essentially a shapeless plastic sack hanging from a tree limb — is a chuckle and jab at the sanctity of modernist design. Mitchell also lays out the Photographer’s requisite costume in his Army-surplus iteration of the self-portrait; more clever in its pairing with scarecrows, for which clothes literally make the man.

Some Thing Means Everything for SomebodyBy Peter Mitchell. RRB Publishing, 2015.
Some Thing Means Everything for SomebodyBy Peter Mitchell. RRB Publishing, 2015.

Usefulness is an important concept to Mitchell; he evokes it in Strangely Familiar, and knocks it around again here. He emphasizes that the objects he photographed are not trophies in a static collection, but things that he uses every day — his Signalling Equipment Ltd. compass goes with him whenever he leaves Yorkshire. Yet it is an understanding of the utility of the photographs themselves that is his aim and moving target. In the absence of a more obvious personal memento, Mitchell’s late sister is represented here by a 35mm slide of sandwiches in cross section, from an industrial presentation from her work with the Experimental Sandwich Unit at Heinz Food. An utterly banal photo/object finds its second-act usefulness as narrative stand-in and poignant keepsake. While Mitchell’s scarecrows wear ephemerality on their weather-beaten sleeves, they, along with the objects they watch over, achieve a certain reprieve and raison d’être when fixed in his photographs. The scarecrows are recurring visual anchors in a story of steadfastness and continuity. Like Mitchell’s collected objects, the scarecrows define the boundaries of this life story and guard its riches. Yet, as it must seem even within King Tut’s tightly packed antechamber to the afterlife, what an expansive, magical place it is where Peter Mitchell and his friends live. —KAREN JENKINS

KAREN JENKINS earned a Master's degree in Art History, specializing in the History of Photography from the University of Arizona. She has held curatorial positions at the Center for Creative Photography in Tucson, AZ and the Demuth Museum in Lancaster, PA. Most recently she helped to debut a new arts project, Art in the Open Philadelphia, that challenges contemporary artists to reimagine the tradition of creating works of art en plein air for the 21st century.


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Book of the Week: A Pick by Mary Goodwin

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Book of the WeekBook of the Week: A Pick by Mary GoodwinMary Goodwin selects By Rail and By Sea by Scott Conarroe as Book of the Week.
By Rail and By Sea. By Scott Conarroe.
Waltz Books, 2015.
This week's Book of the Week pick comes from Mary Goodwin who has selected By Rail and By Sea by Scott Conarroe from Black Dog Publishing.

"In America, trains hold a very special place in the national psychology. For vast swaths and generations of the population, trains and train travel are mythological, romantic concepts rather than facts of everyday life. Here is that myth: Trains, pushing ever out and westward, carried the goods that made America into an economic powerhouse; trains transported people from moribund cities on one coast to space and fresh air on another; trains are freedom and adventure and also danger, the only vehicle that could have brought America up to the edge of its Manifest Destiny.

Canadian photographer Scott Conarroe has been exploring the rambling physical lines of this mythology for many years. In his first monograph, By Rail and By Sea, Conarroe shows us the many landscapes throughout North America that provide the real-life backdrop to our romantic visions of the rails; he also explores the coastlines where those visions drift away.

Using a large format camera, Conarroe photographs these land and seascapes in the dawn and dusk light that seems the only kind that could accurately illuminate myth. Photographing almost always from a slightly elevated perspective, he shows us the rails as they cut through and along deserted plains and waterways, and also through our cities and backyards. By the rails and by the seas, there are also traces of how we live our lives now, on both sides of the tracks and by the shore. Industrial parks, single-family homes, apartment buildings, abandoned cars, amusement parks, pools, and even other forms of conveyance mark the places we have set down roots. Perhaps this is the secret tension in these photographs; they explore the places where the myth of constant expansion and motion meets the reality that we are already there."—Mary Goodwin

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By Rail and By Sea. By Scott Conarroe. Waltz Books, 2015.
By Rail and By Sea. By Scott Conarroe. Waltz Books, 2015.

Mary Goodwin is the founder and publisher at Waltz Books (www.waltzbooks.com), an independent photobook publishing company.

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Book Review: Fire in Cairo

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Book ReviewFire in CairoBy Matthew ConnorsReviewed by Adam BellWhile aspects of a revolution can be disclosed in iconic images of crowds, dramatic standoffs and confrontations, real political change unfolds over a long period of time and is impossible to reveal in photographs. In January of 2013, Matthew Connors traveled to Egypt to witness the dramatic events in Egypt’s Tahrir Square.


Fire in Cairo. Photographs by Matthew Connors. 
SPBH Editions, 2015.
 
Fire in Cairo
Reviewed by Adam Bell 

Fire in Cairo
Photographs by Matthew Connors.
SPBH Editions, London, England, 2015. In English. 130 pp., Lithograph illustrations, 7¾x10".  


While aspects of a revolution can be disclosed in iconic images of crowds, dramatic standoffs and confrontations, real political change unfolds over a long period of time and is impossible to reveal in photographs. In January of 2013, Matthew Connors traveled to Egypt to witness the dramatic events in Egypt’s Tahrir Square. Arriving two years after the initial protests, occupation of Tahrir Square, and eventual deposition of former President Mubarek, Connors was present during the peak of opposition to then President Muhammad Mori and returned several times leading up to the eventual escalation of protests in June of 2013. Distilled from thousands of photographs, Fire in Cairo is the result of Connors’ time there and an evocative portrait of an unfolding revolution. Using Tahrir Square and the whole of Cairo as a stage, Connors has crafted ambitious and thoughtful book that is at once humanistic, yet also expansive and metaphoric in scope.

Fire in Cairo. Photographs by Matthew Connors. SPBH Editions, 2015.

Read from right to left, Fire in Cairo mimics a traditional book in Arabic and begins in what most Western readers would consider the back. The book opens with a full-bleed image of a robed cleric and proceeds with a series of paired sequential black-and-white portraits of protestors and a single pair of different policemen. Taken moments apart, some portraits differ subtly, whereas others are nearly identical. The mostly young protestors stare directly into the lens and address the viewer with eyes that are hopeful and determined. Gradually their gaze becomes diverted, masked or veiled, and more visible signs of the conflict appear. The intimacy of the portraits makes way for the chaos and fragmented view of the revolution on the ground.

Fire in Cairo. Photographs by Matthew Connors. SPBH Editions, 2015.

While the book can be read in either direction, which allows for subtle shifts in the sequential flow and meaning, it proceeds most logically from its front, where one also finds the title page and short story, inspired by Donald Barthelme, by Connors. In another subtle design choice, the images in the book slowly reduce in size as the book progresses. In contrast to the opening series of intimate portraits, the book ends with an image of the night sky, flared with light, and clouded with smoke that resembles a distant nebula. Moving from the ground outwards and then up to the sky we slowly telescope away, through the haze and turmoil of conflict, from the individual faces and drama on the streets to the celestial elements above. Read in reverse, we’re brought back to the ground and reminded of the source and reason for the upheaval.

After the relative calm of the portraits, a palpable tension enters the work. The figures become masked and a sense of anticipation and tension lingers— a fire burns in the darkness, green lasers cut through the night sky, and men hurl teargas canisters, or stand shrouded in smoke. Connors studiously avoids showing direct conflict and instead concentrates on moments before or after the drama like a blood-splattered wheel of a BMW or a torched and graffitied van. As Connors recently noted, the book “swings between the familiar and unfamiliar, and it maintains tensions between beauty and threat and historical consequence — it’s meant to keep you off balance.”* In one interesting sequence about two-thirds through the book, an image of crossed plywood on the ground precedes and echoes the two following upside down images of helicopters circling above. A distinct break in the sequential flow of the book, their meaning is not entirely clear, but its hard not to see it as symbolic not only of the constantly shifting allegiances and positions of the various political factions still vying for power in Egypt, but also our own confusion.

Fire in Cairo. Photographs by Matthew Connors. SPBH Editions, 2015.
Fire in Cairo. Photographs by Matthew Connors. SPBH Editions, 2015.

Fire in Cairo has its roots in a previous body of work by Connors, General Assembly, which was shot in Zuccotti Park during the Occupy Wall Street protests in 2011-12. It was during this time that Connors met some Egyptians, who had participated in the initial uprisings in Tahrir Square and inspired him to travel to Egypt. Composed entirely of similarly formal black-and-white portraits, the images in General Assembly are both compassionate and revealing and call to mind the poignant portraits of Iraq war protestors by Judith Joy Ross. Holding up signs or standing defiantly, the portraits, like those in Fire in Cairo, give identity to the people involved and defies the urge to dismiss them as faceless radicals. Although Connors expanded the scope of his images in Fire in Cairo, both bodies of work grapple with the nature and visual presence of revolutionary change not only in the participants, but also in the surrounding landscape.

Fire in Cairo. Photographs by Matthew Connors. SPBH Editions, 2015.

Although the world has largely turned away from Egypt, the ongoing repercussions of the 2011 protests continue to this day. Throughout this time, Tahrir Square has remained an epicenter for the political struggle between the largely secular protestors, the Muslim Brotherhood, and the Egyptian military. Mubarek and Morsi are both gone, but now a new strong man, Abdel Fattah el-Sissi, is in power. As power shifts back and forth between various factions, the people continue to hope for peace and meaningful change. While none of these factual details are present in Connors’ work, he is nevertheless able to capture the chaotic unease of an unfolding revolution — a revolution where change can quickly turn bloody and frightening, but can also offer moments of surreal beauty and urgent hope.—Adam Bell

* Lucy Davies, “Fire in Cairo” in British Journal of Photography, June 2015, p. 47.

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ADAM BELL is a photographer and writer. His work has been widely exhibited, and his writing and reviews have appeared in numerous publications including AfterimageThe Art Book ReviewThe Brooklyn RailfototazoFoam MagazineLay Flatphoto-eye and Paper-Journal. His books include The Education of a Photographer and the forthcoming Vision Anew: The Lens and Screen Arts. He is currently on staff and faculty at the MFA Photography, Video and Related Media Department at the School of Visual Art. (www.adambbell.com and blog.adambbell.com)


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Nudes/Human Form Newsletter Vol. 15

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Nudes/Human Form NewsletterNudes/Human Form Newsletter Vol. 15Volume 14 of photo-eye's Nudes/Human Form Newsletter featuring books that explore the human form in a variety of ways. Today we highlight titles from Paweł Jaszczuk, Peter Suschitzky, Saul Leiter, Jimmy DeSana, Peter Lindbergh and Irina Ionesco.
photo-eye's Nudes/Human Form Newsletter features books that explore the human form in a variety of ways. Sign up for the Nudes/Human Form Newsletter here.

PRE-ORDER DEADLINE




Kinky City — SIGNED
Photographs by Paweł Jaszczuk

For about three years, from 2007 to 2010, Paweł Jaszczuk routinely grabbed his bike after returning from his day jobs and dived into the metropolis’s nightlife, looking for Tokyo’s swinger clubs and happening bars, its couple kissas and private sex-parties. He won over their hosts and owners, sat at bars and in booths, listened to at times questionable music and convinced the guests to be pictured by him while living their fantasies.

Kinky City is a ‘naked’ book with open-thread stitching in a relief silkscreened slipcase made of raw cardboard and has been printed in an edition of 400.

photo-eye is taking pre-orders for signed copies of Kinky City. If our supplier runs out, orders will be fulfilled in the order in which they are received. The cutoff time for ordering in our shipment is Monday, September 7th at 10:00 am MDT.

Pre-order signed copies Kinky City or read more



Naked Reflections — SIGNED
Photographs by Peter Suschitzky

The work in this book is drawn from a project which cinematographer Peter Suschitzky has been working on for the past seven years between his activities in the film industry. Suschitzky decided to take up this project after years and years of photographing all over the world. He wanted to find a theme which he could work on at home and in his own time and that was steeped in tradition.

Peter Suschitzky started his career as a cameraman at twenty-one, in documentary films destined for German television, in Latin America. When he returned to London, good fortune brought him his first feature film, aged twenty-two. Suschitzky has been the director of photography on nearly fifty films, including: The Rocky Horror Picture Show, Crash, Naked Lunch and Maps to the Stars. Suschitzky is a long time collaborator of director David Cronenberg.

photo-eye is taking pre-orders for signed copies of Naked Reflections. If our supplier runs out, orders will be fulfilled in the order in which they are received. The cutoff time for ordering in our shipment is Monday, September 7th at 10:00 am MDT.

Pre-order signed copy of Naked Reflections or read more


NEW ARRIVAL


Painted Nudes
By Saul Leiter

Painted Nudes is the first and only book dedicated to this rich and unique part of Leiter’s oeuvre (painted photographs). It features over eighty color reproductions of Leiter’s painted photographs - intimate, small-scale pieces that merge Leiter’s two foremost artistic passions and showcase his remarkable sense of color and composition.

"Leiter's brush-strokes breathe a greater form and movement into his photographs. This is the most exciting and beautiful book I've seen of his work and the only one on this fascinating aspect of his career."— Christopher J Johnson

Order Painted Nudes or read more


ARRIVING SOON

Suburban
Photographs by Jimmy DeSana

Suburban collects in print for the first time DeSana's surreally lyrical, sexually charged photographs from his series of the same name, made in the late 1970s through the 1980s. DeSana staged photos of nude subjects, male and female, in various strange, evocative poses, entwined with everyday objects and luridly lit with gel-covered tungsten lights.

"I don't really think of that work as erotic,' DeSana said of this series. 'I think of the body almost as an object. I attempted to use the body but without the eroticism that some photographers use frequently. I think I de-eroticized a lot of it but that is the way the suburbs are in a sense."— Jimmy DeSana

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Images of Women II
Photographs by Peter Lindbergh

Internationally-revered German fashion photographer Peter Lindbergh revolutionized his metier with iconic images of the 1980s supermodels. From his beginnings, he has sought to capture the personality, character, and identity of fashion models, not just the glitter and glamour.

Images of Women II features highlights of Lindbergh's between 2005 and 2014: fashion photographs, nudes, and portraits of today's actresses and models.

Order book or read more




OUT-OF-PRINT



The Eros of Baroque — First Edition/First Printing
Photographs by Irina Ionesco

In this collection, photographer Irina Ionesco has allowed her erotic imagination to run free, darkly exploring female sexuality, dressing up, and visions of childhood.

The book's production (black matt pages with glossy black-and-white & color images) is unique and beautifully arranged. The Eros of Baroque remains startling contemporary nearly 30 years after its publication.


Slight rubbing to bottom right-hand corner of dust jacket, otherwise in very fine condition with library jacket. This book in fine condition normally fetches between $125 & $145 and is difficult to find in the US market; ours is offered for $125.

For more information email or call Christopher J. Johnson, 800.227.6941



View past editions of the Nudes/Human Form Newsletter

Book Review: The Sea Remembers

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Book ReviewThe Sea RemembersBy Rosemarie ZensReviewed by George SladeFor some time now — perhaps as long as I’ve been writing reviews — it’s been clear to me that I am not a very good reader of other writers’ reviews, here on photo-eye’s stream or elsewhere. Much as I love photobooks, I rarely gravitate towards reading what others have to say (though I often skim reviews of books in other genres). I guess I’m preoccupied with my own peculiar way of thinking about and reacting to the photobook phenomenon.

The Sea RemembersBy Rosemarie Zens
Kehrer Verlag, 2015.
 
The Sea Remembers
Reviewed by George Slade

The Sea Remembers
Photographs by Rosemarie Zens.
Kehrer Verlag, Heidelberg, Germany, 2015. In German/ English. 136 pp., 30 color and 20 b/w illustrations, 7¼x9¾x½".


For some time now — perhaps as long as I’ve been writing reviews — it’s been clear to me that I am not a very good reader of other writers’ reviews, here on photo-eye’s stream or elsewhere. Much as I love photobooks, I rarely gravitate towards reading what others have to say (though I often skim reviews of books in other genres). I guess I’m preoccupied with my own peculiar way of thinking about and reacting to the photobook phenomenon. How much would I be influenced by reading others’ writings? Probably not much, but I hesitate to try it. Do any of my fellow reviewers feel this way?

Come to think of it, this may be a good way to learn who, if anyone, is reading my pieces. Let me know, any of you photo-eye reviewers who have read this far. And please accept my apologies for not being a more diligently supportive colleague.

What I gleaned from Adam Bell’s August 10 review of Bergen, by Daniela Keiser, is pertinent to my task today. Not only are there some conceptual and narrative crossovers between Bergen and The Sea Remembers— my ultimate destination in this circumambulation — Adam’s epigraph is particularly provocative. He quotes the writer W. G. Sebald from a profile by Maya Jaggi in The Guardian, September 21, 2001. Sebald spoke of places having memory, and “activat[ing] memory in those who look at them.” What piqued my interest was that Zens, in The Sea Remembers, espouses a very different opinion, notwithstanding structural similarities between her tale and Keiser’s.

The Sea RemembersBy Rosemarie ZensKehrer Verlag, 2015.

Zens’ story is one of an émigré’s return. Zens was a baby in her mother’s arms when her family left their home in Pomerania, a portion of the German Reich that is part of today’s Poland. In March 1945, however, WWII was ending, and the Russian Army was moving quickly westward across this territory. To keep ahead of them, and the chaos they were allegedly causing in their march, Zens’ family packed and embarked on a zigzag journey toward Berlin. Pomerania became contested land. Its history, its memory of itself as a place, was erased.

The Sea RemembersBy Rosemarie ZensKehrer Verlag, 2015.

As a middle-aged woman, Zens returned to this area with the goal of reclaiming memories she hoped were latent in the landscape. She may have been too young, left Pomerania too early, for that topography to have rooted in her unconscious, kinesthetic mind. She found a long excerpt of her mother’s journals (it appears in German and English in the book); written in retrospect, several decades later, it reconstructed the flight, and evoked earlier journeys and seaside visits. Her mother’s words also prompted Zens’ desire to retrace the route. But the cultural shift from the place her mother knew and loved was too substantial. Zens describes her own “wide arc into the unknown” to seek Bad Polzin in Pomerania, “the place of my birth according to my passport, now in Poland with a name unfamiliar to my ear… No memories of it clinging to my mind’s eye.”

The Sea RemembersBy Rosemarie ZensKehrer Verlag, 2015.

To my eye, the images she made on her quest back into the mythical place “Pomerania” echo the flight she made with her mother some five decades earlier. They are the cautious, low-angled, distant, often partially obscured views of those hoping to hide and remain undiscovered until safety is assured. The interplay of these images with a small sample of very specific, intimate archival photographs of her often joyful family (her father, especially, is recalled as a positive force in the group) generates an overall impression of dislocation and frustration. Despite her closely-knit family unit, Zens lacks the tools or insight — “cell-memory,” even — to access the inherent meanings of the lands they occupied and traversed.

The Sea RemembersBy Rosemarie ZensKehrer Verlag, 2015.

The book’s English title, “the sea remembers,” is an interesting spin on the German title, “Das Meer erfindet nichts,” which in my long under-utilized, non-idiomatic German knowledge translates as “the sea invents nothing.” The sea is constant, containing only truths and realities. Does it remember? I suppose it absorbs what occurs in its vicinity, but it remains a largely unreadable text for us, terrestrial beings that we are. The sea may not invent anything, though its capacity to relate memories derives largely from human solipsism.

The Sea RemembersBy Rosemarie ZensKehrer Verlag, 2015.

As I read the 2001 Sebald feature, the one Adam Bell quoted from for his review of WWII displacement in Bergen, I found my own pithy Sebald quote, which will function as an epitaph for this review and for the lost lands of Zens’ experience of a past ultimately not her own:

Going home is not necessarily a wonderful experience. It always comes with a sense of loss, and makes you so conscious of the inexorable passage of time.

Zens lost her homeland, though she retains her mother’s words, which may be insufficient but are mirrored in the photographer’s own tenuous, camouflaged attempts to re-envision displaced cultural landscapes. The sea, meanwhile, contains this narrative, and all others, acting as an eternal, silent witness.—GEORGE SLADE

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GEORGE SLADE, a longtime contributor to photo-eye, is a photography writer, curator, historian and consultant. He can be found online at http://rephotographica-slade.blogspot.com/

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Book of the Week: A Pick by Simon Baker

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Book of the WeekBook of the Week: A Pick by Simon BakerSimon Baker selects Taratine by Daisuke Yokota as Book of the Week.
Taratine. By Daisuke Tokota.
Session Press, 2015.
This week's Book of the Week pick comes from Simon Baker who has selected Taratine by Daisuke Yokota published by Session Press.

"Daisuke Yokota is quickly establishing himself as among the most innovative and original of the new generation of photographers in Japan. His subtle, layered work takes both the potential and the problems inherent to a range of photographic processes (and cross-processes) into ever-more complex structures of strata, echo and interruption. In his new book Taratine, Yokota both reveals and conceals, offering glimpses of his personal life, in both text and image; profound, compound visions which are always subject to the dizzying aesthetic filters inherent to his practice. Yokota works consistently and with great energy and application to produce images that not only tell us about the strange gaps between life and art, but about the continued vitality of the 'mysteries of the dark-room' in the digital age. His work is significant because it is drawn directly from the everyday and yet seems balanced perpetually between what is recognisable and what is not, between memories themselves and the strange unknowable systems by which memories take form: neither collages, nor montages, as such, but superimposed screens, like those from which Yokota produces and reproduces moments of ordinary magic."—Simon Baker

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Taratine. By Daisuke Tokota. Session Press, 2015.
Taratine. By Daisuke Tokota. Session Press, 2015.


Dr Simon Baker is Senior Curator, International Art (Photography), at Tate. Prior to becoming Tate’s first curator of photography in 2009 he was Associate Professor of Art History at the University of Nottingham, where he specialised in surrealism, photography and contemporary art. Recent exhibitions at Tate have included Conflict, Time, Photography (2014), William Klein + Daido Moriyama (2012). He also curated Another Language – 8 Japanese Photographers for the Arles Photography Festival in 2015. He has written widely on photography and contemporary art and will publish a monograph on George Condo, forthcoming with Thames and Hudson, October 2015.

Video: Michael Lange on WALD

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VideoMichael Lange on WALDPhotographer Michael Lange discusses his series WALD, currently on view at photo-eye Gallery.

WALD | Landscapes of Memory, #6678 – Michael Lange
Silence, stillness, and a sense of solace are the hallmarks of the photographs in Michael Lange's series WALD, completed in 2012, and his first landscape series. In this video introduction to Lange's atmospheric collection of large format color images made in German forests, the photographer discusses the genesis of WALD including its central themes as well as his personal relationship with the forest. Lange also speaks to his photographic practice while creating WALD and how its signature muted and silvery look came into being.





WALD | Landscapes of Memory, #0252– Michael Lange
Read more about WALD

Michael Lange's exhibition WALD // fluss is currently on view at photo-eye Gallery through October, 17th.

View photographs by Michael Lange

For more information, and to purchase prints, please contact Gallery Director Anne Kelly at 505-988-5152 x 121 or anne@photoeye.com
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