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Où suis-je

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Anne-Lise Coste
Où suis-je



Published by: Edition Patrick Frey

182 pages 24 x 32 cm Hardcover 2014

£41.00

Anne-Lise Coste’s fourth artist’s book, Où suis-je, is a collection of penetrating glimpses into the architectural landscapes of her childhood as they have morphed and reassembled in her mind over time. However filtered and abstracted by memory, these drawings revisit the actual hospitals and infirmaries in which Coste resided as a child during in-patient treatment for an asthmatic condition. They reflect the paradoxically exact and yet imprecise way in which memory replicates details, and the persistence of certain images that remain engraved in our minds.  Où suis-je is a key to comprehending Coste’s work, not only for its autobiographical insights, but also for its demonstration of the expansive way in which Coste uses line and text to meditate on loss, longing, and location.


Photographs

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Karen Kilminik
Photographs



Published by: Edition Patrick Frey

252 pages 21.5 x 23.5 cm Hardcover 2014 

£48.00

After Drawings (1997), Paintings (2001) and Kirschgarten (2005), Photographs is the fourth artist’s book by the Philadelphiaborn and based Karen Kilimnik (b.1955) to be published by Edition Patrick Frey. It brings together the sporadically exhibited and by and large unknown photographic works of the artist, who gained fame in the 1980s with her “scatter art” installations and later with her paintings.  Karen Kilimnik takes pictures with the same gesture she paints with: an unerring sense of the glut of shiny surface beauty, under which lurk the shades of monstrous things unseen and unspoken. She takes pictures with a shrewd, informed eye. She adores kitsch, but she knows how phony it is and how much this phoniness makes it irresistible. She is a wise old soul but she’s absolutely determined to preserve the innocence and vulnerability of a young and restless mind. In Bourdieu’s words, her photography strikes a perfect balance between the “ritual” and the “artistic.” Kilimnik takes pictures of what she unconditionally loves, and this love is eclectic and deeply darkly romantic. She photographs idylls ad nauseam: the rolling hills of the Cotswolds in south central England, so leafy they almost seem unreal; a ladies’ bicycle, hedge-lined streets, sheep in the shadow of a tree, cows in the morning mist, a squirrel that seems to be nibbling on a flower, sitting ducks on the banks of a stream. Kilimnik views profane reality through the mercilessly wide-open eyes of her camera lens, transforming it in her photographs into a stage for her fabulously dreamy / nightmarish fairytale figurations and arrangements. When reality does not suffice, she embellishes it, trimming the trees in the garden, for example, with glass Christmas ornaments or with fairy lights. 

Irene

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Roswitha Hecke
Irene



Published by: Edition Patrick Frey

160 pages 24.5 x 18 cm Hardcover 

£48.00

Roswitha Hecke’s photo book Liebes Leben (Love Life) about the Zurich artist-muse and prostitute, Irene, also called “Lady Shiva,” was published for the first time in 1978. It became both a cult book and an international success. Reprinted many times and translated into several languages, it is finally available again. The new, revised volume put out by Edition Patrick Frey presents photos that have never before been published. It is through the director Werner Schroeter that Roswitha Hecke met Irene. Irene, a secret star of Zurich’s Bohème at that time, worked as a prostitute until her tragic accidental death. For three weeks Hecke photographed her daily routine in Zurich and accompanied her to Rome where Irene always celebrated her birthday. The result was a subtle and strong portrait of a woman, both beautiful and confident, with an unrivaled eroticism and proud elegance. The photos, a mix of choreographed and documentary work, capture an unusual immediacy and presence. “Irene wanted to be pretty, to be a woman, to be free. She was direct and moody, like a child. She loved a flirt more than marriage. Tension more than harmony. Longing more than satisfaction. And distance more than contact. She lived her life according to this, come what may.” (Roswitha Hecke)

Alien

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H.R. Giger
Alien



Published by: Edition Patrick Frey

660 pages 23.5 x 13 cm Hardcover 2014

£90.00

HR Giger worked in the Shepperton Studios near London from February to November 1978, creating the figures and sets for the film Alien (1979) directed by Ridley Scott. The film became an international success, earning Giger an Oscar. In the transcribed Alien Diaries, published here for the first time as a facsimile, HR Giger describes his work in the studios. He writes, sketches, and takes photographs with his Polaroid SX70. With brutal honesty, sarcasm and occasional despair, Giger describes what it is like working for the film industry and how he struggles against all odds — be it the stinginess of producers or the sluggishness of his staff — to see his designs become reality. The Alien Diaries (in German transcription with an English translation) show a little-known personal side of the artist HR Giger and offer an unusual, detailed glimpse into the making of a movie classic through the eyes of a Swiss artist. The book contains almost completely unpublished material, including drawings, Polaroids showing the monster coming to life, and several still shots from the plentiful film material that Giger took in Shepperton.

Das Fremde ist nur in der Fremde fremd

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Damian Christinger / Museum Rietberg
Das Fremde ist nur in der Fremde fremd



Published by: Edition Patrick Frey

196 pages 33.5 x 24.5 cm Softcover 2014

£34.00

Questions about local versus global production and reception, about paradigm changes in cultural identity and about the possibilities of understanding foreign cultures are subjects of discourse and debate at universities, art museums and biennials all over the world. Surprisingly, however, these issues have yet to find much resonance within the very institutions which — in some cases willy-nilly — led the discussion in the 19th and 20th centuries: namely, ethnological museums and large institutional collections of what was widely known up to the 1970s as “world art.” Although it has now become customary practice to juxtapose historical collections with contemporary art, curators have hitherto by and large sidestepped the issue of how “foreign culture” has been received down through history. But the very relevance of an historical collection hinges on this very question.  The July 2014 exhibition Gastspiel (“guest appearance”) at the Museum Rietberg seeks to probe these possibilities. How do we “natives” react to what is temporally and geographically foreign? And what other questions do our reactions raise? 21 contemporary artistic positions, in the form of site-specific installations and performative actions, sound out the museum as an institution, its collection and the ideas underlying it. Edition Patrick Frey’s eponymous Das Fremde ist nur in der Fremde fremd presents various interpretations of these artistic interventions as well as photographic documentation of the show, rounded out by literary contributions from Peter Weber and Lukas Bärfuss. (The book is only available in German) Damian Christinger

Lines and Cracks

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Michael Genovese
Lines and Cracks



Published by: OHWOW

96 pages 21 x 15 cm Hardcover 2014

£17.00

The title of Michael Genovese's exhibition, Lines and Cracks and Zebras and Horses, draws in part on a colloquial aphorism — “when you hear hoof beats behind you, don’t expect to see a zebra” or “when you hear hoof beats, think horses, not zebras” — which typically is understood to evolve from the principle of Occam’s (or Ockham's) razor. Attributed to the 14th century logician and Franciscan friar William of Ockham, the principle states, “Pluralitas non est ponendasine necessitate,” or “Entities should not be multiplied unnecessarily.” Drawn from disparate, often familiar or banal moments oflines and cracks, the delicate, quiet sculptural interventions reconsider and combine occurrences as varied as a crack inthe artist’s kitchen floor, a damaged mihrab from 12th century Iran, a varicose vein, a line from a CAPTCHA (those computer tests that determine ahuman is using the site, not a machine), the seam line of an Ancient Greek horse head sculpture, and the stress fracture from a brick building in Compton. “Lines and Cracks and Zebras and Horses”: in that grammatical setup, seems to parallel lines with zebras, cracks with horses. Following the logic above, this would suggest that “lines” are the less empirically likely to be the right theory, while “cracks” the better assumption in similar situations. This is a reverse of expectation, combining the common connotations of all these, one would expect to find the zebras in the cracks, and let the horses follow the lines. However, the parallel is notstrictly correct; rather than a comma between the couplets, Genovese connects them with the same conjunction, “and,” making them technically a list of equivalent things. Perhaps lines aren’t the best or shortest ways between objects or places, perhaps they separate rather than connect parts.Perhaps cracks show richness formerly hidden, reveal depth where there was only surface, or function as a suture point that holds things together with true delicacy and vulnerability. Featuring an essay by Shamim Momin.

Crossboarding

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LO/A Edtions
Crossboarding



Published by: LO/A Editions

188 pages 20 x 27 cm English and French

£45.00

This catalogue is published in conjunction with the exhibition Crossboarding - An Italian paper history of Graffiti Writing and Street Art - curated by Christian Omodeo and organised by LO/A Thematic Bookstore and Gallery, and le grand jeu, digital playground.

Seven Films

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Paul Sietsema
Seven Films



Published by: Mousse Publishing

135 pages 15 x 25 cm Hardcover 2014

£23.00

Published in conjunction with Sietsema’s show at Museum of Contemporary Art Denver, Seven Films by Paul Sietsema is the first publication devoted to the artist’s films. In the words of Sarah Robayo Sheridan, “Paul Sietsema compounds organic and artificial detritus in all his artwork, scavenging in history’s wake to identify specific tools of cultural production and foraging for concepts of art promulgated in the words of artists and attitudes of critics. He mines film as a vestige, the medium of the mechanical age, pressing and squeezing its very obsolescence through a contemporary sieve. In so doing, the artist hovers in the switchover between a bodily inscription in the image and a fundamental reconstitution of sight and representation in the matrix of the virtual. Where body stops and image starts is a divide collapsing through a series of innovations and accidents that go back as far as the people of Pompeii trapped in an emulsion that marked their death, but which paradoxically carried forward their image into eternity.”  


Works 1969 - 1987

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Robert Overby
Works 1969 - 1987



Published by:

294 pages 24 x 31.5 cm Softcover 2014

£23.00

Despite a prolific and diverse practice, Robert Overby (1935–93) remains one of the best-kept secrets in post-war American art. While rarely exhibiting during his lifetime, he nonetheless built up an extraordinary, multifaceted body of work encompassing sculpture, installation, painting, photography, print and collage. This monograph is published on the occasion of “Robert Overby: Works 1969-1987”, the first survey exhibition of the artist’s work to be organized in Europe. Edited by Alessandro Rabottini —in collaboration with Andrea Bellini and Martin Clark—it has been conceived, from the outset, as a joint project of four partner institutions: Centre d’Art Contemporain, Genève; GAMeC – Galleria d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Bergamo; Bergen Kunsthall, and Le Consortium, Dijon.

1000 Children

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Osamu Yokonami
1000 Children



Published by: Osamu Yokonami

358 pages Softcover 

£39.70

Emon Photo Gallery presents the latest private work by Osamu Yokonami as he revisits his enchantment with the number 1000, gained upon viewing the thousand statues of the thousand-armed deity–Kannon–in the Hall of the Lotus King in Kyoto. Seen all together, the neutral expressions on the faces of 1000 children captured by Yokonami begin to betray their underlying emotions, and the near-identical composition of each photo unmasks the vibrant individuality inherent in each child. EMON Photo Gallery invites one and all to enjoy this ambitious exhibit featuring motion picture and installation art. 

Technical Compositions

Studies of Last Flight

East of The Sun, West of The Moon

Portable Hell

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Paul Herbst
Portable Hell



Published by:

17.5 24.5 cm Hardcover 2014 

£25.00

'Portable Hell' is a photobook that consists of a collection of humorous yet dark images shot in London between 2008 and 2011. Though the origins of the title are not exactly clear, the author describes it as something to do with constant uneasiness he felt while working on it. The book features various images, colorful or black and white, they are all gathered together in a magical synergy. Be it animals portrayed out of their natural habitat or a simple texture, there's an awkward connection between the aesthetics of the collection, which scares and inspires at the same time. Finding beauty in strange and wicked scenery Herbst manages to create an exquisite world of the unknown yet casual world of everyday objects.

Crossboarding

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LO/A Edtions
Crossboarding



Published by: LO/A Editions

188 pages 20 x 27 cm English and French

£45.00

This catalogue is published in conjunction with the exhibition Crossboarding - An Italian paper history of Graffiti Writing and Street Art - curated by Christian Omodeo and organised by LO/A Thematic Bookstore and Gallery, and le grand jeu, digital playground.


Seven Films

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Paul Sietsema
Seven Films



Published by: Mousse Publishing

135 pages 15 x 25 cm Hardcover 2014

£23.00

Published in conjunction with Sietsema’s show at Museum of Contemporary Art Denver, Seven Films by Paul Sietsema is the first publication devoted to the artist’s films. In the words of Sarah Robayo Sheridan, “Paul Sietsema compounds organic and artificial detritus in all his artwork, scavenging in history’s wake to identify specific tools of cultural production and foraging for concepts of art promulgated in the words of artists and attitudes of critics. He mines film as a vestige, the medium of the mechanical age, pressing and squeezing its very obsolescence through a contemporary sieve. In so doing, the artist hovers in the switchover between a bodily inscription in the image and a fundamental reconstitution of sight and representation in the matrix of the virtual. Where body stops and image starts is a divide collapsing through a series of innovations and accidents that go back as far as the people of Pompeii trapped in an emulsion that marked their death, but which paradoxically carried forward their image into eternity.”  

Works 1969 - 1987

$
0
0


Robert Overby
Works 1969 - 1987



Published by:

294 pages 24 x 31.5 cm Softcover 2014

£23.00

Despite a prolific and diverse practice, Robert Overby (1935–93) remains one of the best-kept secrets in post-war American art. While rarely exhibiting during his lifetime, he nonetheless built up an extraordinary, multifaceted body of work encompassing sculpture, installation, painting, photography, print and collage. This monograph is published on the occasion of “Robert Overby: Works 1969-1987”, the first survey exhibition of the artist’s work to be organized in Europe. Edited by Alessandro Rabottini —in collaboration with Andrea Bellini and Martin Clark—it has been conceived, from the outset, as a joint project of four partner institutions: Centre d’Art Contemporain, Genève; GAMeC – Galleria d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Bergamo; Bergen Kunsthall, and Le Consortium, Dijon.

1000 Children

$
0
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Osamu Yokonami
1000 Children



Published by: Osamu Yokonami

358 pages Softcover 

£39.70

Emon Photo Gallery presents the latest private work by Osamu Yokonami as he revisits his enchantment with the number 1000, gained upon viewing the thousand statues of the thousand-armed deity–Kannon–in the Hall of the Lotus King in Kyoto. Seen all together, the neutral expressions on the faces of 1000 children captured by Yokonami begin to betray their underlying emotions, and the near-identical composition of each photo unmasks the vibrant individuality inherent in each child. EMON Photo Gallery invites one and all to enjoy this ambitious exhibit featuring motion picture and installation art. 

Technical Compositions

Studies of Last Flight

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