Peter Sutherland, Smoke Bath
Softcover, 328 pp., offset 1/1, 5.25 x 8 inches
Edition of 500
ISBN 978-0-98259360202
Published by Seems
out of print
Smoke Bath is a collection of photographs and art work loosely based on the theme of camping, nature, and exploring.
The goal of Smoke Bath is to showcase the work of artists that are inspired by nature and raise money for freshair.org in the process. The Fresh Air Fund (freshair.org) is an independent, not-for-profit agency that provides free summer vacations to New York City children from low-income communities.
Abby Portner, Ahndraya Parlato, Ajit Chauhan, Albert Maysles, Alec Soth, Alex Sturrock, Alexander Binder, Ali Bosworth, Andre Simmons, Andrew Guenther, Andrew Laumann, Andrew N Shirley, Andrew Sutherland, Angela Boatwright, Anya Jasbar, Aram Tanis, Arik Roper, Ariko Inaoka, Art, Aurelian Arbet JSBJ, Beezer, Ben Pier, Boogie, Brad Troemel, Brion Nuda Rosch, Cali DeWitt, Camille Vivier, Carola Bonfili, Cheryl Dunn, Chris Johanson, Christian Belgaux, Christian Patterson, Coley Brown, Collier Schorr, Culture, Dana Goldstein, David Aron, David Potes, Distribution, Dominic Neitz, Donniella Davy, Dylan Reece, Ed Templeton, Eden Batki, Erik Kessels, Erik Van Der Weijde, Fabian Zapatka, Francine Spiegel, Fumie Ishii, Gary Trinh, Gerhard Stochl, Gregory Halpern, Hamilton Morris, Henk Wildschut, Ian Helwig, Irinia Rozovsky, Jack Greer, Jason Lee, Jason Polan, Jeff Luker, Jennifer Shear, Jennilee Marigomen, Jeremie Egry JSBJ, Jeremy & Claire Weiss, Jeremy Jones, Jim Mangan, Joe Roberts, Jonnie Craig, Jordan Awan, Josh Slater, Julia Chiang, Julia Solis, Junichi Sakamoto, Justine Kurland, Kate Steciw, Keiko Ichinose, Kelie Bowman, Kelly Reichardt, Kento Mori, Kevin Romaniuk, Kevin Spanky Long, Kevin Trageser, Kevin van Braak, Klara Källström & Thobias Fäldt, Landon Metz, Lele Saveri, Lester B Morrison, Lindsey Elsaesser, Lindsey White, Linus Bill, Luke Barber-Smith, Madi Ju, Maggie Lee, Marius Nilsen, Mark Borthwick, Mark Cross, Mark DeLong, Mark McKnight, Massimiliano Bomba, Mat O'brien, Matt Anderson, Matt Dilmore, Maya de Forest, Michael Worful, Michelle Blade, Mike Brodie, Mike O'Meally, Mike Pare, Misaki Kawai & Justin Waldron, Misha Hollebach, Naomi Fisher, Natalie So, Nicholas Gottlund, Nicholas Haggard, Nick Neubeck, Nicolas Poillot JSBJ, Oliver Sutherland, Patrick Griffin, Patrick O'Dell, Paul Schiek, Paul Wackers, Pete Volker, Peter Beste, Peter Langer, Peter Sutherland, Peter Vogl, Philip Watts, Philippe Gerlach, Photography, Ray Potes, Richard Prince, Richard Renaldi, Rob Abeyta, Robin Schwartz, Ron Jude, Sake Kota, Sam Falls, Santiago Mostyn, Sean McFarland, Seems, Seth Fluker, Simon Bernheim & Estelle Hanania, Skye Parrott, Sophie Mörner, Susannah Sayler, Swoon, Takashi Homma, Tao Lin, Tetsunori Tawaraya, Thomas Jeppe, Till Gerhard, Timothy Hull, Tod Seelie, Todd Hido, Todd Jordan, Tomoo Gokita, Tony Cox, Victoria Yee Howe, Vincent Dermody, Young Kyu Yoo
Eva Weinmayr, Art in Ruins and Unknown Stranger, London 1994, an unpublished project for Frieze
Softcover, 16 pp., mimeograph/laser 1/1, 210 x 297 mm
Edition of 300
ISBN 978-0-9562605-2-9
Published by Occasional Papers and FormContent
$8.00 ·
This booklet is published as part of
I Wonder What The Silence is About, a body of work, speculating on the (temporary?) disappearance of Art In Ruins. This English collaborative art practice was formed in 1984 and created a radical stance towards the art world, based on critical post-modern thinking. They have been for a short period omnipresent in the London/Berlin art scene before they fell silent in 2001. I contacted Art In Ruins and asked for permission to reprint one of their publications as part of my project. This they rejected but suggested to publish this interview instead, which was initially written for
Frieze Magazine in 1994. It has not been printed until today.
—Eva Weinmayr
Antony Hudek, Art, Art in Ruins, Distribution, Eva Weinmayr, FormContent, Frieze, Occasional Papers, Photography, Sara De Bondt, Unknown Stranger
C Magazine 105, Sports
Softcover, 56 pp., offset 4/1, 210 x 295 mm
Edition of 2000
ISSN 1480-5472
Published by C Magazine
$7.50 ·
Issue 105 includes feature contributions from Ray Cronin on Graeme Patterson, and Elizabeth Matheson and Emelie Chhangur on Humberto Vélez; Karlyn De Jongh interviews Teching Hsieh, Kaitlin Till-Landry interviews Martha Wilson, and Deborah Root examines the performance interventions of Lorena Wolffer; with book and exhibition reviews from Vancouver, Toronto, Montreal, New York and Basel; artist project by Patrick Krzyzanowski.
Art, C Magazine, Deborah Root, Distribution, Elizabeth Matheson, Emelie Chhangur, Graeme Patterson, Humberto Vélez, Kaitlin Till-Landry, Karlyn De Jongh, Lorena Wolffer, Martha Wilson, Patrick Krzyzanowski, Ray Cronin, Sport, Teching Hsieh
Cosmic Wonder, Free Press Light Catalog 1
Softcover, 36 pp., offset 4/4, 148 x 205 mm
Edition of 1000
ISBN 978-3-905714-76-0
Published by Nieves
out of print
The Solar Garden COSMIC WONDER Light Source is a new ecological lifestyle project made with the harmonized energy of the earth and its plants.
This 100% organic cotton collection ranges from daily wear to dance wear, underwear, towels, and scarves. The entire production process is chemical-free. The cotton is grown free of petrochemical fertilizers and sprayed insecticides. All products are hand-dyed with herbs: akane, gardenia, pomegranate, mulberry leaf, rose bengal, catechu, and natural indigo. Prints are also done by hand with herbal dyes. Though these processes are time-consuming, we believe that the care that goes into making them is reflected in the natural beauty of the finished pieces.
Art, Cosmic Wonder, Distribution, Fashion, Nieves
Anders Edström, Safari
Softcover, 32 pp., offset 4/4, 195 x 255 mm
Edition of 1000
ISBN 978-3-905714-58-6
Published by Nieves
$26.00 ·
In Anders Edstrom’s Safari photographs, for instance, a slow, deliberate looking, a looking focused on a singular subject, a looking that by all appearances holds the outside world at bay, nonetheless reveals an image of openness one might better expect from street or landscape photography, genres bent by time, context, event, and change. But what changes in these Safari pictures? Do they have time or context? What is their world?
—Bennett Simpson
Anders Edstrom, Bennett Simpson, Distribution, Lucas Quigley, Nieves
Georg Gatsas, Five Points
Softcover, 48 pp., offset 4/1, 195 x 255 mm
Edition of 1000
ISBN 978-3-905714-72-2
Published by Nieves
$24.00 ·
What makes Georg Gatsas’ work particularly significant is that it is a historical document. This approach puts the art back into artifact. Now we are looking at his images much in the way others must have looked at images of people in the same places over one hundred years ago. I enjoy imagining someone like Georg Gatsas in one hundred years looking at the book you are reading now, I wonder what they might have to say or might be able to learn about these places, people and things.
—James Fuentes
Art, Culture, Distribution, Georg Gatsas, James Fuentes, Nieves, Photography
Ingo Giezendanner, Baku & Back
Softcover, 176 pp., offset 1/1, 132 x 180 mm
Edition of 1000
ISBN 978-3-905714-75-3
Published by Nieves
$28.00 · out of stock
This summer, inspired by a cultural exchange program with the Caucasus,
I travelled by land from Zurich to Baku and back. My objective was to document the journey with pen on paper. Though the culture exchange eventually did fail, the experience was intoxicating to my pen and I. The drawings capture the gradual change of scenes from Switzerland through the former Yugoslavian states, Bulgaria, Turkey and Georgia before finally arriving in Azerbaijan (to travel back again just see the book backwards). This is my statement to go out, see the world and avoid airplanes. Take your time and enjoy the view on your train ride.
—Ingo Giezendanner
Art, Distribution, Illustration, Ingo Giezendanner, Nieves
Spike Jonze, I’m Here
Softcover, 48 pp., offset 4/4, 112 x 178 mm
Edition of 1000
ISBN 978-3-905714-77-7
Published by Nieves
$18.00 ·
Spike Jonze’s new half-hour short film titled I’m Here is a robot love story celebrating a life enriched by creativity. The movie is set in contemporary Los Angeles, where life moves at a seemingly regular pace with the exception of a certain amount of robot residents who live among the population. A male robot librarian lives a solitary and methodical life — devoid of creativity, joy and passion — until he meets an adventurous and free spirited female robot.
Distribution, Film, Nieves, Spike Jonze
Mark DeLong, Cold Pop
Softcover, 100 pp., offset 4/1, 7.75 x 9.75 inches
Edition of 1000
ISBN 978-0-9825936-0-8
Published by Seems
$24.00 ·
Cold Pop features three separate but related bodies of work by artist Mark DeLong: a series of six panel cartoons, a selection of ceramics, and graphite drawings. Delong combines dreamlike associations with movie and television references that, though tongue-in-cheek and humorous, border on the horrific. The vast network of associations — anthropomorphized raisins, rabbits, and and cats — mingle in an absured and anxiety-laden world where figures wrestle with their neuroses, boredom, unrequited lust, and romantic rejection.
Art, Distribution, Mark DeLong, Seems
Ed Templeton, The Seconds Pass
Hardcover, 154 pp., offset 4/4, 11 x 7.75 inches
Edition of 1000
ISBN 978-0-9825936-1-5
Published by Seems
$52.00 ·
There is a scribble of asphalt and meandering ribbons of concrete tangled all over North America in a contiguous line of material that connects each of us to whomever else is also in contact. I sometimes marvel at this, walking from my front door and standing on the asphalt looking down at its grimy blackness, wishing I could rest my ear down on it and hear everything like the Indians in an old western film. The pavement I’m standing on is connected to other pavement, concrete, or steel to almost anywhere I can think of. Certainly everywhere you can drive to. Someone in Burnt Church, Tennessee is standing on gravel that is connected by touch to my street, just like someone is in Halifax, Nova Scotia. I can be in New York City in 3 days from my home in the suburban sprawl of Orange County, California without ever touching the earth.
—Ed Templeton
Art, Culture, Distribution, Ed Templeton, Photography, Seems
Sandy Kim, Sandy Kim
Softcover, 80 pp., offset 4/4, 10 x 8 inches
Edition of 500
ISBN 978-0-615-32175-2
Published by Unpiano Books
$20.00 ·
Sandy Kim utilizes a highly self-referential style of photography which peers into the tiny microcosm of one woman’s life. Reminiscent of the casual documentary style popularized by Nan Goldin in the Eighties, the photographs in Sandy Kim highlight her life at one particular moment and the people who are revolving in and around it.
—Jesse Pollock
Sandy Kim is pretty short, has a ton of hair, a broken orange backpack and always loses her camera. When that happens, she just gets a disposable and keeps taking pictures. It’s this lackadaisical tenacity that translates into her photos, how they always looked kind of busted but warmly worn in and comfortable. Like many young photographers, she’s made her friends her subjects — landscapes of young women, tattoos and San Francisco fog. But she never lays a soft hand, as if anything flattering in her photos is accidental. That’s not to say her photos are purposefully unappealing or harsh, but simply that they are so often just really gross — honest portraits of much of her daily life. But Sandy’s grossness is completely malleable, sometimes funny, sometimes horrific, sometimes unbelievably lush. Sandy is such a brazen and unafraid woman and that power continually streams strongly in her photos, across all spectrums of feeling and subject. Throughout Sandy Kim, there is a lot of blood, but that blood is never the same — blood on her sheets after sex, blood from a dead body covered in a sterile white sheet, blood on the hand of a friend after an unknown accident. He’s smiling, looking straight at the camera, at Sandy. They both know it will heal.
—Matthew Schnipper
Culture, Distribution, Jesse Pollock, Mark Kaiser, Matthew Schnipper, Nan Goldin, Photography, Sandy Kim, Unpiano Books
Man Ray, La Photographie N’Est Pas L’Art
Softcover, 64 pp., offset 4/1, 160 x 245 mm
Edition of 1000
ISBN 978-3-902675-30-9
Published by Fotohof Editions
$39.00 ·
Photography is not art, proclaims Man Ray in the essay re-published here as an impeccable facsimile edition of the 1937 original. A pamphlet of loose sheets and 12 images, this publication re-visits an issue that was hotly controversial during the first half of the 20th century — Is Photography Art? — as examined in the influential Paris magazine L’Art. Despite the fact that Man Ray’s provocative works were among the photographs generally agreed by critics to be, in fact, art, Man Ray himself seems barely interested in considering the question. “There’s no point trying to find out if it’s an art,” he said. “Art is a thing of the past. We need something else. You’ve got to watch light at work. It’s light that creates. I sit down in front of my sheet of photographic paper and I think.”
Art, Fotohof Editions, Man Ray, Photography, RAM
Mariana Castillo Deball and Irene Kopelman, A for Alibi
Softcover + dust jacket, 240 pp., offset 2/2, 160 x 240 mm
Edition of 1000
ISBN 978-1-933128-33-7
Published by Sternberg Press
$29.00 ·
A for Alibi explores the boundaries of scientific practice and art. The Uqbar Foundation invited a group of artists to perform research and develop projects using the impressive collection of historical instruments and optical devices. Fully illustrated, this book documents the artists’ projects as well as a symposium of the same name, where scientists and art historians lectured on the origins of modern visual culture.
Brian O’Connell, Irene Kopelman, James Beckett, Manuel Raeder, Maria Barnas, Mariana Castillo Deball, RAM, Sebastian Diaz Morales, Sternberg Press, Suchan Kinoshita, Tiemen Cocquyt, Tine Melzer, Uqbar Foundation