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Scorpio

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Mike Slack
Scorpio



Published by: The Ice Plant

80 pages 18 x 23 cm Hardcover 2006

£20.00

In his second book of Polaroids, Scorpio, Mike Slack charts a familiar but undetermined terrain through fragments of architecture, geology and space. Designed as a companion to Ok Ok Ok (2002), this collection begins with what appears to be a fallen asteroid and ends with what might be a stray, mythical dog—evokative bookends to a kind of travel narrative (or psychic puzzle) in which Slack's mastery of the Polaroid medium infuses commonplace observations with hints of a lingering, otherworldly past.


Raising Frogs for $$$

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Jason Fulford
Raising Frogs for $$$



Published by: The Ice Plant

96 pages 24 x 30 cm Hardcover 2006

£24.00

A game, a series of essays, an abstract visual storybook...all of the above? The design of Jason Fulford's third photobook is rigid and deliberate, while its meaning is flexible. "The intention of this edit and layout," Fulford explains, "is to create as many relationships as possible between the pictures as well as the chapters. I like the idea of a meticulously planned-out event that remains unpredictable." The work in RAISING FROGS FOR $ $ $ was selected from his personal archive, taken between 1997 and 2005 in various countries.

2013 - 2014

Financial District

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Jason LeCras
Financial District



Published by: VUU Books

28 pages 12.5 x 18 cm Softcover 2014

£10.00

A series of street photographs depicting lower Manhattan in the four years surrounding the 2008 US market collapse.

Waiting on the Dream

Lost Art

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Chris Nosenzo
Lost Art



Published by: Printed Matter

118 pages 13 x 20 cm Softcover Edition of 350

£8.00

Lost Art is a catalog of post-modern artworks that have suffered a material destruction, displacement, or disappearance. Conceived as a print archive, this book collects the documents and remains of 25 lost works ranging from Duchamp’s “Bicycle Wheel,” lost a century ago, to a Warhol film destroyed by police, a suite of prints from Richard Prince that hung in the World Trade Center, and Tracey Emin’s shattered “Always.” Manifesting Lucy Lippard’s observed “dematerialization of art,” all that remains are documentation and secondary sources. The book includes color plates and descriptions for each of the works, followed by a collection of notes from Nosenzo falling somewhere between art-history and personal account. “How can this sublime be achieved if there is a void, if the object is lost? Again this question arises: can documentation and fragments of lost artwork be sufficient to stand in as a surrogate? Or maybe, on the contrary, can the evidence of death itself summon the sublime?” That these lost works have been forged by the curator is never mentioned in the publication. Grounded in research and committed to assimilation into the art-world as a specific object, the exhibition catalog as artists’ publication allows for a unique type of subversive interaction. While art forgeries are usually made for material gain, here the act is fruitless. This reversal emphasizes the idea rather than the commodity nature of the artwork, reiterating efforts that have already been made by most of these artists in their concept-driven practice. Ultimately the project, built up of layers and contradictions, is essentially a bound and printed commitment to an exceedingly complex waste of time.

Versions

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Max Stolkin
Versions



Published by: Printed Matter

15.5 x 22 cm Softcover Edition of 350  

£7.00

Versions by Max Stolkin offers a concise treatment of infinite regress that pairs Hubble telescope deep-field imagery with found images of modernist stacking tables and several versions of the same story. This title was published by Printed Matter as part of their Emerging Artists Publication Series.  

Proposals for Printed Matter


Pictures of Pictures

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Sara Cwynar
Pictures of Pictures



Published by: Printed Matter

15 x 22 cm Softcover Edition of 350 2014

£14.00

Sara Cwynar uses collage and re-photography to make composite images that resemble old advertisements or stock photography

Demonic Interventions wth IKEA Furniture

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Clive Murphy
Demonic Interventions wth IKEA Furniture



Published by: Printed Matter

78 pages 15 x 20 cm Softcover 2014

£10.00

Clive Murphy and Aengus Woods’ DIWIF: DEMONIC INTERVENTIONS WITH IKEA FURNITURE explores the relationship between utopian aspirations and our suppressed primitive selves through the convention of the self-assembly manual. Clive Murphy is a visual artist. Aengus Woods is a writer and curator. Both are based in Brooklyn.

May The Road Rise To Meet You

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Sara Macel
May The Road Rise To Meet You



Published by: Daylight Books

74 pages 23.5 x 26 cm Hardcover 2014

£30.00

In this remarkable pseudo-documentary and biography, Sara Macel followed her father, a traveling salesman, on his trips across the US. In popular mythology, few professions are as emblematic of this mobile, ambitious and commercially minded nation as the traveling salesman. As the Internet and outsourcing make this once ubiquitous occupation obsolete, May the Road Rise to Meet You explores the life of a businessman alone on the road. On a larger scale, this project explores the changing nature of “the road” in American culture and in the history of photography. With these images, Sara Macel creates a visual narrative of her father’s life separate from his family structure. In the same way that a family photo album functions to present an idealized version of their history, these photographs are what both Macel and her father want the visual narrative of his working life to be remembered as.

Retrospective

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Alberto Garcia Del Castillo
Retrospective



Published by: Shelter Press

58 pages 11 x 18 cm Softcover 2014

£9.00

Alberto García del Castillo’s first novel, Retrospective, is a comedy-science-fiction novelette about ‘faggotry’ and the art world; depicting a retour-au-passé in contemporary painting and waving to some of the most beautiful homosexuals on Earth. Flaunting otherness, the alert reader can follow a clerk of The Land of Sculptures whilst he encounters the pretty faces of The Painter, The Foreign Painter, The Tyrolese Painter and other people doing art and drugs. Retrospective includes “Thumbs-Up”, a superficial analysis of the normalisation of gayness; “Why Homos Are Better”, a masterpiece of investigative journalism in two parts, that originally appeared in Agony 2 (circa 1988–93), a zine edited by B. Boofy and William Bonifay; a drawing by Jurgen Ots; a photograph by César Segarra; and a poem by Lars Laumann.  

One Hand, and the Other

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Emil Salto
One Hand, and the Other



Published by: Cornerkiosk Press

28 pages 19x14.5cm Softcover 2014

£22.00

There's a hand and there's another and then there is the other. Echoes of year-old sunlight exposing hand gestures, a soft shadow against changing background, and a brilliant rectangle entering the frame and fixating the narrative.

Materialien (E)

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Peter Piller
Materialien (E)



Published by: Nieves

68 pages 15.5 x 20.5cm Colour Offset Text in German 2014  

£14.00

Fotomuseum Winterthur commissioned Peter Piller with a work, which brought him to Winterthur multiple times to take photographs in the years 2013/14. In the exhibition Peripheriewanderung Winterthur (Periphery Walk, Winterthur) and the artist book by the same name we witness how a passionate interest from his childhood repeatedly enters into Piller’s life. Or in his own words: “Interests buried or repressed by hormones do not die but live on in encapsulated form, unnoticed for decades at a time, and then suddenly they appear once again. In the new millennium they have been displaced further, taking a biographic track and demanding, naturally and immediately, an outlet through photography.” With his laconic and humorous gaze he not only focuses his camera on aging industrial complexes, neatly organized residential developments, and areas of greenery, but also engages in a reflection on his own profession.

Tree Stone Water

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Gerry Johansson
Tree Stone Water



Published by: Libraryman

48 pages 16 x 20 cm Softcover BW Offset 2015

£31.00

Photographs taken 1999 in Ehime Prefecture, Japan for the EU Japan Fest Committee. Book editing and design by Tony Cederteg.  Copies to be dispatched at the end of March, 2015.


Heaven

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Dennis McGrath
Heaven



Published by: Seems

134 pages 23 x 30 cm Hardcover Colour Offset 2015 Pre-order your copy, to be dispatched in April.  

£27.00

Dennis McGrath’s debut book Heaven illustrates an incredible journey of a lost soul. Professional skateboarder Lennie Kirk started his career in the early ‘90s, at the ripe young age of 16. He was a wild child, fearless and invincible. Nothing seemed out of his reach. He was only 18 when he was run over by a truck. Board broken but otherwise unharmed, he walks away and ‘found God’. After being ‘saved’ his wild antics were no different, if anything crazier. His passion was manic and dangerous, and often got him into trouble. Being ‘saved’ wasn’t enough to save him in the end. Lennie is currently serving 13 years in jail. It’s his second sentence. With an intense collection of letters, photographs and ephemera, McGrath takes us on a visual journey through Lennie’s wild ride of life.

Issue 7

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Mood Magazine
Issue 7



Published by:

96 pages 20 x 26.5 cm Softcover Colour Offset

£12.00

Exotic, colorful and loud! In issue 7, MOOD explores the best of five fascinating cultural enclaves scattered around the US, goes to Dubai to discuss a new shawarma concept, visits London to refuel with a blend of coffee and music and raids New York City to learn the secrets of a vegan Rastafarian diet. There are also stops in Lisbon, Slovenia and Nashville, vegetarian recipes, a conversation about burritos and Beyoncé with James Bay and much more.

Issue 21

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Palais Magazine
Issue 21



Published by:

28.5 x 22.5 cm Bilingual (French & English) 2015

£13.90

Issue #21 of PALAIS is entirely devoted to the exhibition “Le Bord des mondes” [“At the Edge of the Worlds”] at the Palais de Tokyo (February-May 2015). By exploring territories that lie outside the art world and bringing to light unique gestures that give way to new forms of creation, the exhibition “Le Bord des mondes” aims to renew and expand the field of our artistic attentiveness. Featured in issue 21: The curator of the exhibition, Rebecca Lamarche-Vadel, presents the stakes at the heart of the exhibition and invites readers to discover the research undertaken by these creators, which goes beyond the classic definitions of art. Jean-Marie Schaeffer (philosopher) presents a view which runs counter to a position that seeks to oppose art and everything that is not art. He considers art to be a plural world which is constantly redefining its reach and nature through its interactions and exchanges with the multiple worlds that border it. Brian Dillon (writer and art critic) proposes a classification of the forms and the individuals who have played a role in the history of the way we have examined and exhibited the world. And also: David Raymond (artist and writer) about Bridget Polk’s “balancing rock”; Laurent Derobert talks with Edward Frenkel (mathematician) and Peter Coffin (artist); Philippe Rekacewicz (cartographer and journalist) about Jerry Gretzinger’s imaginary map; Sandra Maunac (curator) about Kinshasa Sape; Hiroshi Ishiguro (creator of “geminoid” robots) talks with Keiichiro Shibuya (music composer); Theo Jansen about his “beach creatures”; Frédérique Aït Touati (literature and science history researcher and stage director) about Tomás Saraceno; Bénédict Beaugé (food essayist) about Pierre Gagnaire’s cuisine; Jean-Paul Thibeau (artist) about Jean Katambayi (artist-hacker); Jane Venis (sculptor and writer) about Kenji Kawakami’s chindogu. As well as: CKY, Carlos Espinosa, Rose-Lynn Fisher, Game of States, Iris van Herpen, Zdenek Kosek, Jesse Krimes, Kusköy, Charlie Le Mindu, Arnold Odermatt, Le Prince noir, George Widener.

Eine Sorgenfreie Zukunft

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Sylvie Ringer
Eine Sorgenfreie Zukunft



Published by:

24 pages 24 x 32 cm Softcover Colour Offset Edition of 300

£8.00

All works crayon, graphite and charcoal on 170 Munken paper. 

Here 1989

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Richard McGuire
Here 1989



Published by: Loose Joints

12 pages 15 x 19 cm Softcover BW Offset Edition of 500

£5.00

Here 1989 is the first re-print of Richard McGuire's cult comic strip. The six-page comic Here, which appeared in 1989 in Raw magazine, volume 2, number 1, was immediately recognized as a transformative work that would expand the possibilities of the comics medium. Its influence continues to be felt twenty-five years after its publication. Here 1989 coincides and accompanies with the release of Here, a development over 25 years of this original comic into a 360-page book, published by Hamish Hamilton. Richard McGuire is a regular contributor to The New Yorker. His work has appeared in The New York Times, McSweeney's, Le Monde andLibération. He has written and directed two omnibus feature films: Loulou et Autres Loups(Loulou and Other Wolves, 2003) and Peur(s) du Noir (Fear[s] of the Dark, 2007). He has also designed and manufactured his own line of toys, and he is the founder and bass player of the band Liquid Liquid. 

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