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  • af Katie Nicholl
    568,95 kr.

    The only official book published for the Platinum Jubilee Pageant, featuring more than 250 beautiful images from throughout The Queen's 70-year reign. Including exclusive content on the Pageant itself, this book is a wonderful souvenir of an exceptional celebration.

  •  
    228,95 kr.

    A profile of 30 historically and culturally important objects from the renowned Gardiner Museum, Toronto, which has one of the greatest collections of ceramics in the world. Exquisite craftsmanship is apparent and awe-inspiring in the featured works by illustrious names such as Marc Chagall, Betty Woodman, Marilyn Levine, Wedgewood and Delft.

  • af Aimee Selby
    242,95 kr.

    In paperback for the first time, the bestselling Art and Text covers the development of the textual medium in art from the early combinations of text, lettering and image in the work of seminal artists such as El Lissitzky and Kurt Schwitters.

  • af Leena Al-Nasser
    518,95 kr.

    Combining illustration and narrative text, this is the first book presenting the work of Arab multimedia artist and writer Leena Al-Nasser.

  • - Making Sense of the City
    af Simon Foxell
    423,95 kr.

    Mapping London: Making Sense of the City is a beautiful, compelling anthology of over six centuries of London maps, tracing the mesmerising evolution of the city and exploring the hopes and fears of its inhabitants as history unfolds. Now released in Paperback. The book is a cartographic journey, charting the influence of Roman city planning, Saxon feudalism, Medieval tumult, imperial hubris, contemporary town planning and more on this great metropolis. It includes over 200 maps, from literary imaginings and utopian prophecies to portrayals of London in contemporary computer games, comics and online--as well as the timeless Monopoly board. The maps in this comprehensive survey are allowed to speak for themselves, revealing not only their political and social context, but also the dreams of their makers and the drama of their creation. The maps are often objects of great skill and beauty themselves, with the names of the greatest of their makers still revered today. Much more is revealed by the maps than the cartographers themselves could have envisaged, they provide enthralling insights into events including the Great Fire of London, the Plague and the Industrial Revolution. The city's more recent history is also investigated, including the irrevocable change of the two World Wars and the redevelopment planned for the 2012 Olympics. The book is split into four sections, each beginning with a short introduction and beautifully illustrated by the maps themselves: London Change and Growth; Serving the City; Living in the City; and Imagining London. Including engaging and illuminating essays exploring the history of the maps and how they have been used for social, political and commercial purposes, Mapping London: Making Sense of the City is a lavishly illustrated book which explores the city through the ages in all its labyrinthine glory. Perfect both for gifts and for all those serious about maps and cartography.

  •  
    488,95 kr.

    Hilary Harkness: Everything for You is the first comprehensive monograph on the artist’s work. This heavily illustrated publication provides an opportunity for further exploration of Harkness’s practice alongside essays by Lynne Tillman and Dr Ashley Jackson, as well as insights from the artist herself.

  •  
    408,95 kr.

    Hardeep Pandhal: Inheritance Quest is the first monograph on Hardeep Pandhal, whose practice concerns the unsettling and transformative forces of migration, historical violence and cultural assimilation. This book includes images of the artist’s key works and QR links to view key videos online as well as critical texts by Zahid Chaudhary, Gabrielle de la Puente, Hammad Nasar and Jamie Sutcliffe. It also includes a conversation with artist and academic David Steans.

  • af Ruba Katrib
    208,95 kr.

    "Where is Production?" is the first instalment of Black Dog Publishing's series "Inquiries into Contemporary Sculpture" that explores what constitutes, excites, entangles, and necessitates ideas and questions around sculpture. Each volume in the series chooses a different line of inquiry, aided by a select group of artists, curators and historians. "Where is Production?" is an exploration into the medium's modes and sites of production. It questions the meaning of the word 'production' itself, what it encompasses, and how it informs and leads sculptural practice today. With contributions by SculptureCenter members of staff - Mary Ceruti, the Executive Director and Chief Curator, and Ruba Katrib, Curator - alongside artist Carol Bove and Editor-in-chief of "Artforum" magazine Michelle Kuo, amongst others. "Where is Production?" is an insightful, thought-provoking look at contemporary sculpture, for those interested in the field and contemporary art as a whole. The SculptureCenter is a not-for-profit arts institution in Long Island City, New York, dedicated to experimental and innovative developments in contemporary sculpture.

  •  
    413,95 kr.

    Executed in a range of media, including densely layered painting, sculpture, installation, sound, video and performance, this is the first monograph on the work of contemporary artist Mandy El-Sayegh. This book includes critical essays, conversations with the artist, and photography documenting her exhibitions, performances and studio processes.

  • af Bex Day
    623,95 kr.

    A photographic series celebrating the uniqueness of the vulva. Each vulva pictured is covered by a petal or flower in an effort to dismantle taboos about female genitalia. Spanning ages, races, genders, hair types, sizes and shapes, this is a captivating and colourful compilation, with each image accompanied by a message written by the subject.

  •  
    413,95 kr.

    The first monograph on March Avery, the daughter of artists Milton Avery and Sally Michel Avery. This book documents over 80 years of her work featuring everyday domestic scenes, portraits of friends and family members, and landscapes visited and revisited over the course of a lifetime, with texts by Johanna Fateman, Lynne Tillman and John Yau.

  •  
    428,95 kr.

    The Mark Tanner Sculpture Award is the most significant prize for emerging sculptors in the UK. This fully illustrated book presents the winners from the past ten years along with a variety of critical texts, including a conversation between former award judges Lisa Le Feuvre, Phyllida Barlow, Hew Locke and Mike Nelson.

  •  
    413,95 kr.

    The first monograph on the artist Ambreen Butt, this book features paintings, collaged works and large-scale installations from the past three decades, exploring civil liberties and rights, mutual responsibilities and complex geopolitical forces. It includes texts by curator/writer Sara Raza and artist/critic Quddus Mirza.

  • af Marisa Culatto
    498,95 kr.

    This book presents artist Marisa Culatto’s Flora series of 35 works featuring plant life that has been composed, frozen and then photographed in the manner of a still life. Each work includes a text by botanical researcher and gardener Eduardo Barba and a watercolour illustration by Anna Tiulkina.

  • af Morgan Howell
    233,95 kr.

    Morgan Howell 7” features 100 artworks by British artist Morgan Howell, whose supersized versions of classic 7” singles have attracted a host of celebrity fans, from Neil Diamond and Andrew Lloyd Webber to Johnny Marr and Shaun Ryder. This book includes forewords by Sir Peter Blake and Andrew Marr.

  • af Stephen Bayley
    456,95 kr.

  • af Raoul Bunschoten
    168,95 kr.

    Public Spaces is the fourth title in BDP's Serial Books Architecture & Urbanism series. It features the most recent work of CHORA, Raoul Bunschoten's urban workshop. Looking at prototypical public spaces, such as clusters of small courtyards - the 'cities' of Paris - to the ceremonial space of the folded ground - the 'Prado' - behind the Prado Museum, Madrid, CHORA proposes new ways of engaging with the urban environment through local, regional, national and global strategies.

  • af Kevin Rhowbotham
    136,95 kr.

    Field Event/Field Space follows on Rhowbotham's ideas for a critically engaged and responsible architecture and pursuing them here in the specific context of the urbanisms of the former East Block states and their regions.

  • af Nicholas Sawicki
    413,95 kr.

  •  
    478,95 kr.

    British abstract artist Johnnie Cooper presents his new major body of work, inspired by Walter de la Mare's brooding poem 'The Listeners'. Painted during the twilight hours outside his woodland studio, Cooper's work captures the deep beauty and mystery of a forest dissolving into nighttime shadows, bringing a darker and more abstract emotion to the fore.

  •  
    374,95 kr.

    Exploring Kevin Schmidt's output across the different mediums of performance, video, photography, and installation, this book provides a major overview of the artist's work.

  • af Nigel Prince
    343,95 kr.

    Accompanying Julia Dault's first solo museum exhibition, this book is an engaging and long overdue introduction to the artist and her work.

  • af James Reid
    398,95 kr.

    Featuringthe photography of Edinburgh-based visual artist James Reid, Edinburgh: AnArchitectural Portrait presents a beautiful photographic mapping of thecity's most architecturally significant areas. With exclusive imagery createdover the past ten years it will appeal to anyone interested in the architectureand history of this inspiring city.

  • af Allen Jones
    278,95 kr.

  •  
    413,95 kr.

    The first ever major publication of Marianne Eigenheer’s work,published in partnership with the Marianne Eigenheer Estate and von Bartha,Basel, Switzerland. This book celebrates the diverse practice of the artist,which spanned over five decades.

  • af Stuart Hyatt
    320,95 kr.

    The world itself is a recording studio for the experimental musicians of Field Works. Synthesising audio field recordings, interviews and visual documentation, the collective uses observation and experimentation as the basis for a new kind of site-responsive music. The Omniphonic Reader accompanies the launch of a seven-album box set by Field Works and provides insight into and context for this unique musical project. Interdisciplinary artist and Grammy-nominated musician Stuart Hyatt leads Field Works and contributes a complete track-by-track guide to the box set, addressing from many angles the interpretation of place through sound. Renowned naturalist Bernie Krause writes the book's foreword, establishing a taxonomy of the soundscapes explored in the book's original essays: geophony (earth sounds), biophony (animal sounds), anthropophony (human sounds) and cosmophony (sounds from outer space). Edited and designed by Janneane and Benjamin Blevins of PRINTtEXT, the book features contributions from Cheryl Tipp, Leah Barclay, Gustavo Valdivia, Enrique Ramirez, Yiorgis Sakellariou, Sarah Laskow, Stuart Fowkes, Budhaditya Chattopadhyay, Manuja Waldia, Elana Schlenker and Peter Liversidge. The Omniphonic Reader is released in partnership with Brooklyn-based record label Temporary Residence and includes audio downloads of the entire Field Works collection, featuring never-before-heard music from Juana Molina, The Field, Lali Puna, Pantha du Prince, Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith, Eluvium, Dan Deacon, Matmos, Dntel, Gazelle Twin, Visible Cloaks, The Album Leaf, Loscil, Paul De Jong, Mary Lattimore, Lusine, B Fleischmann, William Tyler, Nick Zammuto, Rafiq Bhatia, Lullatone, Benoit Pioulard, Luke Abbott, Marcus Fischer, Rafael Anton Irisarri, Julien Marchal and many others.

  • af Marie-Eve Charron
    358,95 kr.

    Archi-feministes!, a new publication exploring a significant body of historical and contemporary art by women, takes its title from the exhibition of the same name organised by the Montreal-based, non-profit artist-run centre OPTICA.The two-part exhibition at OPTICA interrogated the themes of 'archiving the body' and 'performing the archive', bringing together artists rooted in the documentary tradition, or revisiting it by way of performance, appropriation, accumulation and repetition.Besides challenging notions of authorship and artistic tradition, these strategies examine the artist's body, as well as the time of production and reception of the work. The practices of Sophie BeLlair Clement, Olivia Boudreau, Sorel Cohen, Raphaelle de Groot, Vera Frenkel, Clara Gutsche, Suzy Lake, Emmanuelle Leonard, Claire Savoie and Jana Sterbak probe a variety of production processes through critical operations employing fiction, the body, personal narratives, reflexivity and subjectivity.This publication also examines the signs of a contemporary resurgence of feminism through acts of resistance and practices that revise historical canons and question the normativity of art history as a discipline, among other issues. It also focuses on the Canadian art scene, with references to grass-roots initiatives, collectives and the network of artist-run centres as a background.Contributors to the publication include a number of prestigious and influential feminist writers, curators and artists: Philippe Dumaine, independent researcher; co-founders of Toronto's Feminist Art Gallery (FAG) Deirdre Logue (video artist, activist and Development Director at Vtape, Toronto) and Allyson Mitchell (artist, activist and Associate Professor, School of Gender, Sexuality and Women's Studies, York University); Wanda Nanibush (Curator of Indigenous Art, Art Gallery of Ontario); Johanne Sloan (Professor of Art History, Concordia University); Rinaldo Walcott (Director of the Women and Gender Studies Institute, University of Toronto); and Giovanna Zapperi (Faculty Member, ENSA-Bourges, Art History and Theory Department).

  • af Marie-Eve Charron
    358,95 kr.

    Archi-feministes!, a new publication exploring a significant body of historical and contemporary art by women, takes its title from the exhibition of the same name organised by the Montreal-based, non-profit artist-run centre OPTICA.The two-part exhibition at OPTICA interrogated the themes of 'archiving the body' and 'performing the archive', bringing together artists rooted in the documentary tradition, or revisiting it by way of performance, appropriation, accumulation and repetition.Besides challenging notions of authorship and artistic tradition, these strategies examine the artist's body, as well as the time of production and reception of the work. The practices of Sophie BeLlair Clement, Olivia Boudreau, Sorel Cohen, Raphaelle de Groot, Vera Frenkel, Clara Gutsche, Suzy Lake, Emmanuelle Leonard, Claire Savoie and Jana Sterbak probe a variety of production processes through critical operations employing fiction, the body, personal narratives, reflexivity and subjectivity.This publication also examines the signs of a contemporary resurgence of feminism through acts of resistance and practices that revise historical canons and question the normativity of art history as a discipline, among other issues. It also focuses on the Canadian art scene, with references to grass-roots initiatives, collectives and the network of artist-run centres as a background.Contributors to the publication include a number of prestigious and influential feminist writers, curators and artists: Philippe Dumaine, independent researcher; co-founders of Toronto's Feminist Art Gallery (FAG) Deirdre Logue (video artist, activist and Development Director at Vtape, Toronto) and Allyson Mitchell (artist, activist and Associate Professor, School of Gender, Sexuality and Women's Studies, York University); Wanda Nanibush (Curator of Indigenous Art, Art Gallery of Ontario); Johanne Sloan (Professor of Art History, Concordia University); Rinaldo Walcott (Director of the Women and Gender Studies Institute, University of Toronto); and Giovanna Zapperi (Faculty Member, ENSA-Bourges, Art History and Theory Department).

  • af Catherine Mastin
    320,95 kr.

    Brenda Francis Pelkey's photographs function as an exploration of social geographies; an expansion into the spaces where women are typically not allowed to go. Her images frequently deal with the eerie beauty of floodlit forests at night, where, rather than adopting the historically masculine lens that excludes women from the social scene of night-time, Pelkey positions the space as a place where women are present and have a voice.Pelkey is known also for her expansion of the public understanding of what documentary photography can do; her images of forests at night-time evoke thoughts of the enchanted forests of childhood stories as much as they reveal the crisp reality of the natural forms they depict.Brenda Francis Pelkey is edited by Catherine Mastin, Director of The Art Gallery of Windsor, and accompanies the first major showing of Francis Pelkey's work at The AGW, with this then touring to several other venues across Canada throughout 2017–2018, including Mount Saint Vincent University Art Gallery (22 April–6 August 2017) and Art Gallery of Peterborough (9 September–12 November 2017).