Aperture Spring 2022 Publishing Catalogue

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Spring/2022

Spring 2022

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Cover: Wendy Red Star, Indian Woman Sitting, 2005. From Delegation © Wendy Red Star (see pages 12–13) Page 10: Shikeith, Prince, 2019. From Notes towards Becoming a Spill © Shikeith (see pages 18–19) Page 44: Sara Cwynar, Ali from SSENSE.com (How to Marry a Millionaire), 2020. From Glass Life © Sara Cwynar (see page 54)


Contents About Aperture Foundation Letter from the Executive Director Aperture Magazine 2021 Aperture Magazine: Upcoming and Recent Issues Aperture Magazine: Previously Published New and Recently Published Books Limited-Edition Books Backlist Highlights The Photography Workshop Series Children’s Books Aperture Masters of Photography Anthologies and Compilations Monographs and Artist Books Essay Books How to Order

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About Aperture Foundation A not-for-profit multi-platform photography publisher, Aperture connects the photo community and its audiences with the most inspiring work, the sharpest ideas, and with each other—in print, in person, and online. From our base in New York, each year we produce, publish, and present a program of photography projects, locally and internationally, that includes: 4 issues of Aperture magazine 2 seasons of new photobooks 7 exhibitions on tour Limited-edition prints Talks, workshops, and book signings Aperture Portfolio Prize Paris Photo–Aperture Foundation PhotoBook Awards Aperture–Baxter St Next Step Award Aperture Summer Open Exhibition

See aperture.org for more information 2


Welcome to Aperture 2022 If we haven’t yet met, allow me to introduce myself! I joined Aperture in May 2021 and am so grateful for the warm welcome from those within Aperture, our incredible community of artists and contributors, and our passionate and expansive audience. Before Aperture I worked in the Department of Photography at the Museum of Modern Art for more than twenty-five years. Like MoMA, Aperture is integral to the history of photography and to so many artists who engage with the medium. I have long-treasured my subscription to Aperture magazine; Aperture books are not only beloved additions to my library but essential to my professional development. It is an honor to join an extraordinary group of colleagues who deploy photography to enrich and complicate our understanding of the past and point to the possibilities that lie ahead. The year 2022 marks Aperture’s seventieth anniversary and our spring list remains true to the expansive breadth of our history and mission. Debut monographs by Zora J Murff and Shikeith continue our commitment to first books and celebrate valuable contributions to the evolution of photographic representation, identity, and storytelling. Career surveys of American artist Judith Joy Ross and Norwegian photographer Tom Sandberg, as well as a collaborative anthology on the legacy of artist and mentor Richard Benson, consider the contributions of these figures and their influence on artists today. A mid-career retrospective on multimedia artist Wendy Red Star (who previously guest edited “Native America,” our fall 2020 issue of the magazine) presents an essential new vision of American visual history. In our education and essay titles we are thrilled to welcome Graciela Iturbide to the popular Photography Workshop Series and to publish new volumes in the Lives of Images series, an essential expansion of perspectives on contemporary theories of photography, which launched in fall 2021. Appropriately, the first issue of Aperture magazine in our seventieth-anniversary year will be “Celebrations,” harkening back to a 1974 issue of the magazine, followed by “Sleepwalking,” which will be guest edited by the incomparable Alec Soth. When the first issue of Aperture magazine was published in 1952, the aim of the quarterly was to find a common ground for the advancement of photography, attending to “amateur and professional, pictorialist and documentarian, journalist and scholar.” Seventy years later, we continue to pursue this mission, fostering inspiration, debate, curiosity, and justice for all of us who connect through photography. —Sarah Meister, Executive Director

Spring 2022

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Aperture Magazine 2021 Cosmologies Aperture 244: Fall 2021 Aperture’s “Cosmologies” issue examines the origins, histories, and local universes that artists create for themselves. Greg Tate speaks with Deana Lawson about how her monumental staged portraits trace cosmologies of the African diaspora. Rebecca Bengal shows how a constellation of strangers is brought together through Judith Joy Ross’s precise, empathic gaze. Gesine Borcherdt considers Michael Schmidt’s photographs of a once divided Berlin, while Feng Li’s black-and-white images zigzag between absurdist dramas in various Chinese cities. From the surreal visions of Awol Erizku’s still lifes and tableaux, to Tom Sandberg’s reverent, minimalist grayscales, the artists throughout “Cosmologies” cast their attention on the great mysteries of both personal and shared lineages, tracking their locations in space, time, and history, and reminding us of the elegant enigmas that can be unraveled close to home.

US $24.95 / CDN $27.50 / UK £19.95 Aperture 244: Fall 2021 9 1/4 × 12 in. (23.5 × 30.5 cm) 144 pages Illustrated throughout Paperback ISBN 978-1-59711-505-6 September 2021

Cover: Feng Li, Good Night, 2007–21. Courtesy the artist and Concrete Rep. Ltd

Latinx Aperture 245: Winter 2021 This winter, Aperture magazine presents an issue that celebrates the dynamic visions of Latinx photography across the United States. Guest edited by Pilar Tompkins Rivas, chief curator at the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art in Los Angeles, “Latinx” spans a century of image making, connecting historical and contemporary photography, and covering the themes of political resistance, family and community, fashion and culture, and the complexity of identity in American life. In “Latinx,” Carribean Fragoza traces Laura Aguilar’s influence on queer artmaking. Joiri Minaya remixes postcards from the Dominican Republic to unveil the fantasy of tourism. Christina Catherine Martinez profiles Reynaldo Rivera, who chronicled 1990s-era Los Angeles nightlife. Yxta Maya Murry considers three Latina curators and writers influencing how photography canons are made today. “Collectively, their images cast a greater net for the multiple ways of seeing Latinx people,” Tompkins Rivas notes of the issue’s photographers, “creating a visual archive whose edges are yet to be defined.” US $24.95 / CDN $27.50 / UK £19.95 Aperture 245: Winter 2021 9 1/4 × 12 in. (23.5 × 30.5 cm) 144 pages Illustrated throughout Paperback ISBN 978-1-59711-506-3 December 2021

Cover: Thalía Gochez, Every Worry Melts Away (Naomi Rodriguez and Grace Sanabria), San Francisco, 2019. Courtesy the artist

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Aperture Magazine: Upcoming Issue

Celebrations Aperture 246: Spring 2022

Myriam Boulos, Untitled from the series Tenderness, 2018–ongoing

US $24.95 / CDN $27.50 / UK £19.95 Aperture 246: Spring 2022 9 1/4 × 12 in. (23.5 × 30.5 cm) 144 pages Illustrated throughout Paperback ISBN 978-1-59711-524-7 March 2022

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In spring 2022, Aperture will release “Celebrations,” an issue that addresses rituals, gatherings, and community. Lynne Tillman contributes a survey of landmark images of celebration through the years, from Malick Sidibé and Peter Hujar to LaToya Ruby Frazier. Several profiles and essays—including Alistair O’Neill on Jamie Hawkesworth, Moeko Fuiji on Rinko Kawauchi, Tiana Reid on Shikeith, Mona El Tahawy on Miriam Boulos, and Anakwa Dwamena on Marilyn Nance’s views of Lagos, Nigeria during FESTAC 77—reveal the celebratory gestures embedded in vibrant portraiture, serene slants of light, unbound queer desire, and joyous cross-cultural exchange.


Aperture Magazine: Recent Issues “Smart, scholarly and impeccably designed, this respected quarterly magazine, made in New York . . . is at the top of its game, cementing its position as a true thoughtleader.” —Guardian

Delhi: Looking Out/Looking In

New York

Guest edited by Rahaab Allana Aperture 243: Summer 2021 ISBN 978-1-59711-504-9

Aperture 242: Spring 2021 ISBN 978-1-59711-503-2

Utopia

Native America

Ballads

House & Home

Spirituality

Mexico City

Orlando

Earth

Aperture 241: Winter 2020 ISBN 978-1-58711-486-8

Guest edited by Wolfgang Tillmans Aperture 237: Winter 2019 ISBN 978-1-59711-463-9

Guest edited by Wendy Red Star Aperture 240: Fall 2020 ISBN 978-1-59711-485-1

Aperture 236: Fall 2019 ISBN 978-1-59711-462-2

Guest edited by Nan Goldin Aperture 239: Summer 2020 ISBN 978-1-59711-484-4

Guest edited by Tilda Swinton Aperture 235: Summer 2019 ISBN 978-1-59711-461-5

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Aperture 238: Spring 2020 ISBN 978-1-59711-483-7

Aperture 234: Spring 2019 ISBN 978-1-59711-460-8

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Aperture Magazine: Previously Published “The stunning Aperture magazine edition celebrates a variety of current photographers who are reframing blackness and radically restructuring the contemporary perception of it.” —Huffington Post on Vision & Justice

Vision & Justice Aperture 223: Summer 2016 Cover option 1: Awol 5 2Erizku 495 ISBN 978-1-59711-410-3

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Family

Aperture 233: Winter 2018 ISBN 978-1-59711-436-3

Los Angeles

Aperture 232: Fall 2018 ISBN 978-1-59711-435-6

Film & Foto Aperture 231: Summer 2018 ISBN 978-1-59711-434-9

Future Gender Aperture 229: Winter 2017 ISBN 978-1-59711-421-9

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Elements of Style Aperture 228: Fall 2017 ISBN 978-1-59711-420-2

Platform Africa Aperture 227: Summer 2017 ISBN 978-1-59711-419-6

Vision & Justice Aperture 223: Summer 2016 5 2 4 9Avedon 5 Cover option 2: Richard ISBN 978-1-59711-365-6

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Prison Nation Aperture 230: Spring 2018 ISBN 978-1-59711-433-2

American Destiny Aperture 226: Spring 2017 ISBN 978-1-59711-418-9


On Feminism Aperture 225: Winter 2016 ISBN 978-1-59711-367-0 52495

Sounds Aperture 224: Fall 2016 ISBN 978-1-59711-366-3 52495

Odyssey 5 22016 495 Aperture 222: Spring ISBN 978-1-59711-364-9

Performance Aperture 221: Winter 2015 ISBN 978-1-59711-324-3 52495

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The Interview Issue Aperture 220: Fall 2015 ISBN 978-1-59711-323-6

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Queer Aperture 218: Spring 2015 ISBN 978-1-59711-321-2 52495

Tokyo Aperture 219: Summer 2015 ISBN 978-1-59711-322-9 52495

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“Fashion” Aperture 216: Fall 2014 ISBN 978-1-59711-282-6

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Photography as you don’t know it Aperture 213: Winter 2013 52495 ISBN 978-1-59711-235-2

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Playtime Aperture 212: Fall 2013 52495 ISBN 978-1-59711-234-5

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Lit. Aperture 217: Winter 2014 ISBN 978-1-59711-283-3 52495

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Curiosity Aperture 211: Summer 2013 ISBN 978-1-59711-233-8 52495

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From Notes towards Becoming a Spill © Shikeith (see pages 18–19)

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New and Recently Published Books

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Wendy Red Star: Delegation Artworks by Wendy Red Star With contributions by Jordan Amirkhani, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Josh T. Franco, Annika Johnson, Layli Long Soldier, and Tiffany Midge Copublished by Aperture and Documentary Arts Wendy Red Star (born in Billings, Montana, 1981) is an Apsáalooke artist based in Portland, Oregon. She holds a BFA from Montana State University, Bozeman, and an MFA in sculpture from the University of California, Los Angeles. She has participated in numerous solo and group exhibitions, including at the Newark Museum of Art, New Jersey, and Joslyn Art Museum, Omaha. Her work is in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Museum of Modern Art, New York; Brooklyn Museum; Saint Louis Art Museum; and IAIA Museum of Contemporary Native Arts, Santa Fe. Red Star is the guest editor of Aperture magazine’s Fall 2020 issue, “Native America.” Jordan Amirkhani is an art historian, educator, and critic based in Washington, DC. Julia Bryan-Wilson is the Doris and Clarence Malo Professor of Modern and Contemporary Art at the University of California, Berkeley, and the author, most recently, of Fray: Art and Textile Politics (2017). Josh T. Franco is an artist and art historian from West Texas. He is national collector at the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC. Annika Johnson is associate curator of Native American art at the Joslyn Art Museum, Omaha. Layli Long Soldier is an Oglala Lakota poet, writer, artist, and activist. She is author of the chapbook Chromosomory (2010) and the poetry collection Whereas (2017), which won a National Book Critics Circle award and was a finalist for the 2017 National Book Awards. Tiffany Midge is a poet, writer, and editor. She is author of several books, including the poetry collection The Woman Who Married a Bear (2016) and the memoir Bury My Heart at Chuck E. Cheese’s (2019). She is a Hunkpapa Lakota enrolled member of the Standing Rock Sioux.

• A long-awaited major monograph by a leading contemporary Native American artist • Vivid and exciting collection of multimedia artworks and photographs relating to Indigenous culture • Presents an essential new vision of American visual history

US $65.00 / CDN $88.00 / UK £50.00 8 × 10 ¼ in. (20.3 × 26 cm) 224 pages 130 four-color images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-519-3 May 2022 Limited-edition print available

Spring 2022

Delegation is the first comprehensive monograph by Apsáalooke artist Wendy Red Star, whose lens-based multimedia work recasts historical narratives with wit, candor, and a feminist, Indigenous perspective. Wendy Red Star centers Native life in contemporary art through vivid and imaginative self-portraiture and video, collages integrating archival images and textiles arts, annotation of historical photographs, and site-specific installations. Featuring an array of Red Star’s series from 2006 to the present, and a range of essays by leading curators and writers, Delegation is a spirited tribute to an iconic artist’s singular vision. aperture.org/books

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Zora J Murff: True Colors (or, Affirmations in a Crisis) Photographs by Zora J Murff Contributions by Tay Butler, Widline Cadet, Nick Drain, Bill Gaskins, Nick Norman, Sasha Phyars-Burgess, Legacy Russell, Jay Simple, Aaron Turner, Terence Washington, and Rana Young Zora J Murff (born in Des Moines, Iowa, 1987) is assistant professor of photography at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville. In 2019, Murff was named an Aperture Portfolio Prize finalist, a PDN 30 honoree, and a Light Work Artist-in-Residence; he was one of eight artists chosen for the most recent iteration of the Museum of Modern Art’s New Photography series, Companion Pieces: New Photography 2020. Murff’s books include Corrections (2015); LOST, Omaha (2018); and At No Point In Between (2019). His work was presented at the 2021 Rencontres d’Arles, France, as part of the Louis Roederer Discovery Award. Tay Butler is a multidisciplinary artist currently pursuing his MFA in the University of Arkansas’s photography and studio art program; Widline Cadet is a Haitian artist residing in the United States; Nick Drain is an artist who uses his work to navigate the relationship between Blackness and visibility at the site of the camera; Bill Gaskins is the founding director of the graduate program in Photography + Media & Society at the Maryland Institute College of Art, Baltimore; Nick Norman is a Kentucky-based artist, writer, and educator; photographer Sasha Phyars-Burgess’s first book, Untitled, was published in 2021; Legacy Russell is executive director and chief curator at the Kitchen in New York; Jay Simple is a visual artist, AICAD Fellow, assistant professor of photography at Parsons School of Design in New York, and founder of the Photographer’s Green Book, a resource for inclusion, equity, and diversity in the photographic medium; Aaron Turner is an artist, educator, and independent curator based in Northwest Arkansas; Terence Washington is an art historian and writer who is currently project director for Readying the Museum; Rana Young is an artist and visiting assistant professor of art at the University of Arkansas. Exhibition Schedule: Baxter St at the Camera Club of New York, November 17–December 18, 2021

US $65.00 / CDN $88.00 / UK £50.00 10 × 12 in. (25.4 × 30.5 cm) 220 pages 200 four-color and black-and-white images Paperback with flap ISBN 978-1-59711-517-9 February 2022 Limited-edition print available

Spring 2022

• The first major monograph by rising star Zora J Murff, recipient of the inaugural Next Step Award, a partnership between Aperture and Baxter St at the Camera Club of New York • An incisive, autobiographic retelling of the struggles and epiphanies of a young Black artist working to make space for himself and his community • A generous book, elegantly designed by WORK/PLAY, an interdisciplinary partnership between artists and designers Kevin and Danielle McCoy True Colors (or, Affirmations in a Crisis) is a chronicle of survival by trailblazing artist Zora J Murff. Murff constructs a manual for coming to terms with the historical and contemporary realities of America’s divisive structures of privilege and caste. Since leaving social work to pursue photography over a decade ago, Murff has consistently grappled with the complicit entanglement of the medium in the histories of spectacle, commodification, and race, often contextualizing his own photographs with found and appropriated images and commissioned texts. True Colors continues that work, expanding to address the act of remembering and the politics of self, which Murff identifies as “the duality of Black patriotism and the challenges of finding belonging in places not made for me—of creating an affirmation in a moment of crisis as I learn to remake myself in my own image.” Nuanced, challenging, and inspiring, True Colors (or, Affirmations in a Crisis) is a must-have monograph by a rising and standout artist. True Colors is the result of the inaugural Next Step Award, a partnership between Aperture and Baxter St at the Camera Club of New York, with the generous support of 7G Foundation. An exhibition of the work opened at Baxter St in New York in November 2021. aperture.org/books

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All images © Judith Joy Ross, courtesy Galerie Thomas Zander, Cologne

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Judith Joy Ross: Photographs 1978–2015 Photographs by Judith Joy Ross Edited by Joshua Chuang Essays by Svetlana Alpers, Addison Bross, and Joshua Chuang Contributions by Adam Ryan Judith Joy Ross (born in Hazleton, Pennsylvania, 1946) studied photography under Aaron Siskind at the Institute of Design in Chicago in the 1960s. Her work was first acquired by the Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1984, and was included in John Szarkowski’s landmark 1990 MoMA survey, Photography until Now. Ross’s work is held in public and private collections around the world, and she has received numerous awards, including the 2017 Lucie Award for Achievement in Portraiture. She has published seven monographs. Joshua Chuang is the Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Associate Director for Art, Prints and Photographs and Robert B. Menschel Senior Curator of Photography at the New York Public Library. Among the exhibitions and publications he has organized are Robert Adams: The Place We Live (2010), Blue Prints: The Pioneering Photographs of Anna Atkins (2018), and Santu Mofokeng: Stories (2019). Svetlana Alpers is an art historian, professor, writer, and critic. Her specialty is Dutch Golden Age painting, and she is author of the 1983 book The Art of Describing: Dutch Art in the Seventeenth Century. Alpers has also written on Pieter Bruegel, Peter Paul Rubens, Giovanni Battista Tiepolo, and Diego Velázquez, among others. Addison Bross is a scholar, writer, and professor emeritus of English at Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. Exhibition Schedule: Le Bal, Paris, April–September 2022 The Hague Museum of Photography, the Netherlands, November 2022–March 2023

• An exclusive survey of the full life and career of revered American photographer Judith Joy Ross • Featuring two hundred remarkable portraits, many never before published • Accompanies the largest touring exhibition to feature Ross’s work to date

US $65.00 / CDN $88.00 / UK £50.00 9 ⅜ × 11 in. (24 × 28 cm) 312 pages 200 black-and-white images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-522-3 January 2022

Spring 2022

Judith Joy Ross: Photographs 1978–2015 is an illuminating retrospective that explores the life and career of a revered American photographer illustrated by two hundred of her images, many never before seen or published. The work of Judith Joy Ross marks a watershed in the lineage of the photographic portrait. Her pictures—unpretentious, quietly penetrating, startling in their transparency—consistently achieve the capacity to glimpse the past, present, and perhaps even the future of the individuals who stand before her lens. Adolescents swim at a local municipal park, ordinary people are at work and play. From immigrants and refugees, to tech workers and students, military reservists and civilians—all are incisively rendered with equal tenderness in Ross’s black-and-white, largeformat portraits. Published alongside the largest exhibition to feature Ross’s work to date, and drawn from her extensive archive of photographs made over the span of more than thirty-five years, Judith Joy Ross: Photographs 1978–2015 encompasses the best work of this influential photographer. aperture.org/books

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Shikeith: Notes towards Becoming a Spill Photographs by Shikeith Text by Ashon T. Crawley Shikeith (born in Philadelphia, 1989) lives and works in Pittsburgh. He received a BA from Pennsylvania State University, and an MFA from the Yale School of Art, New Haven, Connecticut. He is recipient of a 2019 Joan Mitchell Foundation Painters & Sculptors Grant; and in 2020, he received an Art Matters Foundation grant and a 2020–21 Leslie Lohman Artist Fellowship. Ashon T. Crawley is the author of The Lonely Letters (2020) and Blackpentecostal Breath: The Aesthetics of Possibility (2016). He is associate professor of Religious Studies and African American and African Studies at the University of Virginia.

• A much anticipated first monograph by acclaimed filmmaker and photographer Shikeith • A visceral and haunting exploration of Black male vulnerability, joy, and spirituality • For fans of contemporary portrait photography and photographers like Deana Lawson, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Mickalene Thomas

US $75.00 / CDN $100.00 / UK £60.00 11 × 12 ¾ in. (28 × 32.4 cm) 128 pages 60 four-color and black-and-white images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-523-0 April 2022 Limited-edition print available

Spring 2022

The first monograph by artist, filmmaker, and photographer Shikeith, Notes towards Becoming a Spill brings together a series of striking studio portraits of Black male subjects as they inhabit various states of meditation, prayer, and ecstasy. Shikeith describes the work as “leaning into the uncanny,” visualizing ritual and the process of excavating Black men’s erotic potential, the better to exorcise the “intangible presences that haunt their bodies and psyches.” The men’s faces and bodies glisten with sweat (and tears)—the manifestation and evidence of desire. This ecstasy is what critic Antwaun Sargent proclaims as “an ideal, a warm depiction that insists on concrete possibility for another world.” In this revelatory volume, Shikeith redefines the idea of sacred space and positions a Queer ethic identified by its investment in vulnerability, tenderness, and joy. Shikeith: Notes towards Becoming a Spill is made possible, in part, thanks to the generous contribution of 7G Foundation. aperture.org/books

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Tom Sandberg: Photographs Photographs by Tom Sandberg Essays by Bob Nickas and Pico Iyer Interview with Tom Sandberg by Torunn Liven Tom Sandberg (1953–2014; born in Narvik, Norway) worked and lived in Oslo. In the early 1970s, he studied photography at Trent Polytechnic, Nottingham, UK, where Thomas Joshua Cooper, Paul Hill, and Minor White were his teachers. Sandberg’s early work was among the first acquisitions of photography by the National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Oslo. His work is held in the collections of numerous other museums, as well as in public and private collections, including those of Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo; and Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris. Bob Nickas, a critic and independent curator based in New York, has organized more than ninety exhibitions since 1984. He was curatorial advisor at the Museum of Modern Art and MoMA PS1 in New York between 2004–7; served on the organizational team for the 2003 Biennale de Lyon, France; contributed a section to the Aperto exhibition at the 1993 Venice Biennale; and collaborated with Cady Noland on her 1992 installation at Documenta IX, Kassel, Germany. His books include Live Free or Die: Collected Writings, 1985–1999 (2000); Theft Is Vision (2007); Painting Abstraction: New Elements In Abstract Painting (2009); Catalog of the Exhibition, 1984–2011 (2011); and The Dept. of Corrections: Collected Writings 2007–2015 (2015). Pico Iyer is author of fifteen books translated into twenty-three languages, including The Art of Stillness: Adventures in Going Nowhere (2014). He is a regular contributor to the New York Times, New York Review of Books, and Harper’s, among many other publications. Torunn Liven is an art historian and writer based in Oslo.

• The first major publication dedicated to one of Norway's most important photographers • An exquisite publication dedicated to a visionary black-and-white photographer • A must-have for lovers of Hiroshi Sugimoto, Edward Weston, and Minor White

US $75.00 / CDN $100.00 / UK £60.00 9 ½ × 11 ½ in. (24.1 × 29.2 cm) 224 pages 175 tritone images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-515-5 April 2022 Limited-edition print available

Spring 2022

Working in a signature modulating gray scale, the late Norwegian photographer Tom Sandberg spent decades rendering the world according to an exacting vision, training his eye on the shapes and forms of the everyday—dark abstractions of asphalt and sea, the hard edges of an automobile, an ominously curved tunnel, an anonymous figure casting a shadow—to plumb the nature of photographic seeing. His pictures are subtle yet transformative, studies of stillness that radiate mystery. A perfectionist in the darkroom, Sandberg was acutely sensitive to the rich spectrum of black and white, and his handmade prints, at times printed on aluminum and canvas, project a powerful physical presence. Although Sandberg is esteemed in his native Norway and throughout Scandinavia and Europe, his oeuvre is less known in the United States and other parts of the world. This monograph, produced in close collaboration with the Tom Sandberg Foundation in Oslo, is a long-overdue celebration of this distinguished artist. aperture.org/books

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Left: Shannon Ebner, A PHOTOGRAPHIC TONE (SEASLAWE), 2017 Top right: Bryan Graf, Untitled, 2011–13 Bottom right: Matthew Monteith, Chip describes the making of the Gilman book to the Yale School of Art 2004 MFA photography class (clockwise from front left: Matthew Connors, Jonnie Andersen, Ted Partin, Richard Benson, Samantha Bass, and Wardell Milan), 2002

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Object Lesson: On the Influence of Richard Benson Includes text, image, and interview contributions by Michele Abeles, Marion Belanger, Barbara Benson, Richard Benson, Dawoud Bey, Andrew Borowiec, Lois Conner, Matt Connors, Tim Davis, Ben Donaldson, Dru Donovan, Martina Droth, Shannon Ebner, John Gambell, John Goodman, Bryan Graf, Gail Albert Halaban, Gary Haller, Heyward Hart, Robert Hennessey, Peter Kayafas, Lisa Kereszi, Justin Kimball, David La Spina, John Lehr, Susan Lipper, Salvatore Lopes, Peter MacGill, Tanya Marcuse, Sarah Meister, Paul Messier, Andrea Modica, Matthew Monteith, Abelardo Morell, Arthur Ou, Thomas Palmer, Tod Papageorge, Ted Partin, Bradley Peters, John Pilson, Kristine Potter, Caitlin Price, Sergio Purtell, John Robinson, Jeff Rosenheim, Sasha Rudensky, Gary Schneider, David Benjamin Sherry, Steve Smith, Mark Steinmetz, Sarah Stolfa, Ka-Man Tse, James Welling, and Jeffrey Whetstone. Exhibition Schedule: Philadelphia Photo Arts Center, Philadelphia, September 21, 2021 – January 8, 2022 Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, October 3, 2021– January 23, 2022

• A stellar group of critics and artists distills the wisdom of artist and educator Richard “Chip” Benson • A rich, wide-ranging account of a unique and innovative figure who made a lasting impact on the medium of photography • For everyone interested in the American lineages of photographic craft, community, and mentorship

US $50.00 / CDN $65.00 / UK £40.00 6 ½ × 9 ½ in. (16.5 × 24 cm) 178 pages 100 four-color and black-and-white images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-495-0 March 2022 Designed by Miko McGinty

Spring 2022

Through engaging testimonials and anecdotes from photographers, curators, printers, and colleagues, Object Lesson: On the Influence of Richard Benson pays homage to this legendary Renaissance man and his lasting impact on generations of photography educators and practitioners. Richard Benson’s name is synonymous with the evolving history and philosophy of photographic reproduction—from making platinum prints for prominent photographers like Paul Strand and books with lifelong collaborators such as Lee Friedlander, to his own experiments with inkjet and digital offset processes. In 1979, Tod Papageorge invited Benson to teach at Yale University’s Department of Photography; together, they shaped one of the preeminent photography programs in the world. Benson would go on to become the dean of the Yale School of Art in 1996. By the time of his death in 2017, Benson had inspired over three decades of students and artisans through his teaching and mentorship. In words and images, Object Lesson stands as a testament to Benson’s wit, wisdom, and incomparable obsession with how photographic images render and connect us to the world. aperture.org/books

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Graciela Iturbide: The Photography Workshop Series Photographs and text by Graciela Iturbide Introduction by Alfonso Morales Carrillo and Mauricio Maillé Graciela Iturbide (born in Mexico City, 1942), best known for her powerful photographs of Mexico, is one of the most celebrated and prolific figures in photography. Her work is collected in museums around the world, including the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; Tate Modern, London; and Centre Pompidou, Paris. She has published several monographs, including Images of the Spirit (Aperture, 1996), Eyes to Fly With (2006), and Graciela Iturbide’s Mexico (2019). She has won the prestigious Hasselblad Award, as well as the Cornell Capa Lifetime Achievement Award. Alfonso Morales Carrillo is a writer, curator, and editor, known for his work organizing and researching photographic archives. He has written numerous articles and essays on photography in Mexico and coordinated national and international exhibitions on a wide range of topics related to Mexican popular culture, from circus to cinema. He graduated from Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Sociales and Centro Universitario de Estudios Cinematográficos at Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico City, and is a founding member of the Centro de Información Gráfica at Archivo General de la Nación, Mexico City. Mauricio Maillé has developed audiovisual projects in photography and cinema for museums, public spaces, editorial publications, and digital platforms for twenty-five years. He has worked as an organizer, curator, editor, and exhibition designer; he has also served as director of visual arts at Fundación Televisa, where he designed more than fifty exhibitions and collaborated in the creation of new museums and cultural spaces.

• The wisdom of one of the most influential photographers working today, now available in book form • Teaches readers about making pictures with depth and personal vision • The latest title in the best-selling Aperture “workshop in a book” series

US $29.95 / CDN $41.95 / UK £22.00 7 ½ × 10 in. (19 × 25.4 cm) 128 pages 70 duotone images Paperback with flaps ISBN 978-1-59711-370-0 April 2022

Spring 2022

In this volume of The Photography Workshop Series, Graciela Iturbide—known for her portraits and landscapes imbued with poetic ambiguity and documentary truth—explores photographing in ways that employ a deeply personal vision, while also reflecting subjects’ rich cultural backgrounds. Aperture Foundation works with the world’s top photographers to distill their creative approaches to, teachings on, and insights into photography—offering the workshop experience in a book. Our goal is to inspire photographers of all levels who wish to improve their work, as well as readers interested in deepening their understanding of the art of photography. Through images and words, Iturbide shares her creative process and artistic inspirations, and discusses a wide range of issues, from portraying spirituality in photographs and engaging with different cultures to the importance of curiosity. aperture.org/books

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The Lives of Images The Lives of Images, Vol. 1: Repetition, Reproduction, and Circulation An Aperture Reader Series Edited by Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa Interviews with Paul Pfeiffer and Batia Suter Contributions by Giorgio Agamben, Kate Palmer Albers, Erika Balsom, Aria Dean, Jodi Dean, Cora Gilroy-Ware, Boris Groys, Miriam Bratu Hansen, Rabih Mroué, and Hito Steyerl Volume 1 of the series, Repetition, Reproduction, and Circulation, addresses the multiple life cycles of the image—its modes of dispersion, reception, consumption, and aggregation—and the significance of technological reproduction for contemporary forms of social, cultural, and political life. The image is considered as both a tool for liberation and a means of repression within the evolving structures of modern life.

US $24.95 / CDN $32.95 / UK £19.95 4 ¾ × 7 in. (12.1 × 17.8 cm) 284 pages Paperback ISBN 978-1-59711-502-5 September 2021

The Lives of Images, Vol. 2: Analogy, Attunement, and Attention An Aperture Reader Series Edited by Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa Interviews with Lucas Blalock and Frida Orupabo Contributions by Victor Burgin, Judith Butler, Tina Campt, Sarah Jane Cervenak, Harun Farocki, Tom Holert, Thomas Keenan, Rabih Mroué, Vivian Sobchack, and Tiziana Terranova Volume 2 in this series, Analogy, Attunement, and Attention, addresses the complex relationships that the reproducible image creates with its viewers, their bodies, their minds, and their sense of the physical and metaphysical world. The selected essays address the image’s role in the social constitution of individual and collective identity, in social practices of resistance to the structural violences of racism, or in relation to state exercises of power.

US $24.95 / CDN $32.95 / UK £19.95 4 ¾ × 7 in. (12.1 × 17.8 cm) 328 pages Paperback ISBN 978-1-59711-507-0 November 2021

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Releasing March 2022 The Lives of Images, Vol. 3:

Archives, Histories, and Memory An Aperture Reader Series Edited by Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa Contributions by Ariella Azoulay, Lara Baladi, Claire Bishop, Ann Cvetkovich, Saidiya Hartman, Marianne Hirsch, Julietta Singh, Katrina Sluis, John Tagg, and Jalal Toufic Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa is a photographer, writer, and graduate director of the photography MFA program at the Rhode Island School of Design, Providence. He is the author of a book of selected essays, Dark Mirrors (2021); and his most recent photographic publication, Hiding in Plain Sight (coauthored with fellow artist Ben Alper), was published by the Harun Farocki Institute in 2020. Wolukau-Wanambwa has guest edited The Photobook Review and written for Aperture, Foam Magazine, and for both the Barbican and the Photographers’ Gallery, London.

• Third volume in The Lives of Images, part of An Aperture Reader Series, built to meet the needs of today’s students and practitioners of photography • Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa gathers essays by the most essential voices addressing the field’s critical issues • A crucial broadening of perspectives on contemporary theories of photography

US $24.95 / CDN $32.95 / UK £19.95 4 ¾ × 7 in. (12.1 × 17.8 cm) 288 pages Paperback ISBN 978-1-59711-512-4 March 2022

Spring 2022

Volume 3 in this series, Archives, Histories, and Memory, addresses the ways repositories of images are complexly bound up with the formation of histories, the perceptual limits of the photograph, the exercise of state power, and with subaltern practices of countermemory. Questions of imperialism’s influence over archival practices and the contested state of the image and the document recur in varying contexts. Taken together, the essays in this volume probe what remains and persists through strategies of preservation, what the politics of preservation accommodate and disavow, what exceeds inscription within the photograph but persists as a ghosting of the image (or the archive), and what the limits of artistic strategies centered in the archive might tell us of our present moment.

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Top left: Hassan Hajjaj, Nido Bouchra, 2000/1421 (Gregorian/Hijri) Top right: Vanley Burke, Boy with Flag, Winford, in Handsworth Park, 1970 Bottom: Deana Lawson, Coulson Family, 2008

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As We Rise: Photography from the Black Atlantic Selections from the Wedge Collection Preface by Teju Cole Introduction by Mark Sealy Interview with Dr. Kenneth Montague by Liz Ikiriko Text contributions by Isolde Brielmaier, Sandrine Colard, Letticia Cosbert Miller, Julie Crooks, Daisy Desrosiers, Liz Ikiriko, O'Neil Lawrence, Kenneth Montague, Ugochukwu-Smooth C. Nzewi, Teka Selman, Zoé Whitley, and Deborah Willis Dr. Kenneth Montague started the Wedge Collection in 1997 to acquire and exhibit art that explores Black identity. In addition to the Wedge Collection, Montague founded Wedge Curatorial Projects, a nonprofit arts organization that helps to support emerging Black artists. A Toronto-based art collector, Montague has been a member of the Art Gallery of Ontario’s board of trustees since 2015. He has served on the African acquisitions committee at Tate Modern, London, and is an advisor to the Department of Arts of Global Africa and the Diaspora at the Art Gallery of Ontario. Teju Cole is a photographer, novelist, essayist, and curator. His books include the novel Open City (2011), winner of the 2012 PEN/ Hemingway Award, and the photobooks Blind Spot (2017), Fernweh (2020), and Golden Apple of the Sun (2021). He is currently a professor in the English department at Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Dr. Mark Sealy is interested in the relationships between photography and social change, identity politics, race, and human rights. He has been director of Autograph ABP (Association of Black Photographers), UK, since 1991, and currently serves as Principal Research Fellow Decolonising Photography at University of the Arts London. Liz Ikiriko is a Tkaronto/Toronto-based, Nigerian Canadian artist and curator. She is curator of collections and contemporary engagement at the Art Gallery of York University, Toronto, and cocurator of the 13th Rencontres de Bamako/African Biennale of Photography, Mali (2021).

US $50.00 / CDN $65.00 / UK £40.00 9 ⅝ × 11 ⅜ in. (24.5 × 29 cm) 184 pages 142 four-color and duotone images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-510-0 November 2021

Fall 2021

• A timely and exuberant look at global Black art, culture, and identity • Richly illustrated with illuminating commentary by leading writers and thinkers • Drawn from a Black-owned collection dedicated to artists from the African diaspora As We Rise presents an exciting compilation of photographs from African diasporic culture. With over one hundred works by Black artists from Canada, the Caribbean, Great Britain, the United States, South America, as well as throughout the African continent, this volume provides a timely exploration of Black identity on both sides of the Atlantic. As Teju Cole describes in his preface, “Too often in the larger culture, we see images of Black people in attitudes of despair, pain, or brutal isolation. As We Rise gently refuses that. It is not that people are always in an attitude of celebration—no, that would be a reverse but corresponding falsehood—but rather that they are present as human beings, credible, fully engaged in their world.” Drawn from Dr. Kenneth Montague’s Wedge Collection in Toronto—a Black-owned collection dedicated to artists of African descent—As We Rise looks at the multifaceted ideas of Black life through the lenses of community, identity, and power. Artists such as Stan Douglas, LaToya Ruby Frazier, Barkley L. Hendricks, Texas Isaiah, Liz Johnson Artur, Seydou Keïta, Deana Lawson, Jamel Shabazz, and Carrie Mae Weems, touch on themes of agency, beauty, joy, belonging, subjectivity, and self-representation. aperture.org/books

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Top: Robert Adams, New Development on a Former Citrus-Growing Estate, Highland, California, 1983 © Robert Adams, Courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco Bottom: Robert Adams, Frame for a Tract House, Colorado Springs, 1969 © Robert Adams, Courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco

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American Silence: The Photographs of Robert Adams By Sarah Greenough Afterword by Terry Tempest Williams Copublished by the National Gallery of Art and Aperture Robert Adams (born in Orange, New Jersey, 1937) has documented the American West in photographs that “face the facts” of humanity’s imprint, yet offer hope of nature’s resilience. A recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship and two Guggenheim Fellowships, he is also a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Adams’s work has been shown widely, including in major exhibitions at the Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, Connecticut; Philadelphia Museum of Art; and Museum of Modern Art, New York. Sarah Greenough is senior and founding curator of the Department of Photographs at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC. She is also author of numerous books, including Looking In: Robert Frank’s The Americans (2009); The Altering Eye: Photographs from the National Gallery of Art (2015); and Sally Mann: A Thousand Crossings (2018). Terry Tempest Williams is a crucial voice for raising ecological awareness and has authored numerous books, from the classic Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place (1991), to the more recent The Hour of Land: A Personal Topography of America’s National Parks (2016) and Erosion: Essays of Undoing (2019). Williams is writer-in-residence at the Harvard Divinity School, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Exhibition Schedule: National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, May 29–October 2, 2022 Nevada Museum of Art, Reno, October 29, 2022–January 29, 2023

• The first in-depth examination of the evolution of Robert Adams’s art, edited by Sarah Greenough and accompanying a major exhibition by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC • Draws on a previously unpublished archive of personal papers and correspondence, contextualized by Adams’s personal reflections • An afterword by Terry Tempest Williams explores Adams’s work, nature, and our place in the American West

US $65.00 / CDN $88.00 / UK £50.00 9 ¼ × 11 ¼ in. (23.5 × 28.6 cm) 304 pages 225 black-and-white images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-511-7 September 2021

Fall 2021

For fifty years, Robert Adams has made compelling, provocative, and highly influential photographs that show us the wonder and fragility of the American landscape, its inherent beauty, and the inadequacy of our response to it. American Silence: The Photographs of Robert Adams examines Adams’s reverential act of looking at the world around him and the almost palpable silence of his photographs. It includes works that capture the sense of peace and harmony that the beauty of nature can instill in us, created through what Adams calls “the silence of light” of the American West (as seen on the prairie, in the woods, and by the ocean), as well as pictures that question our moral silence to the desecration of that beauty by consumerism, industrialization, and lack of environmental stewardship. The book features some 175 works from Adams’s most important projects and includes pictures of suburban sprawl, strip malls, highways, homes, and stores, as well as rivers and skies, the prairie and the ocean. While Adams’s photographs lament the ravages that have been inflicted on the land, they also pay homage to what remains. aperture.org/books

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Gillian Laub: Family Matters Photographs and text by Gillian Laub Gillian Laub (born in Chappaqua, New York, 1975) is a photographer and filmmaker based in New York. She received a BA in comparative literature from the University of Wisconsin–Madison, before studying photography at the International Center of Photography, New York. Her works include the book Testimony (Aperture, 2007) and the book and HBO film Southern Rites (2015). Laub received a New York Foundation for the Arts fellowship in 2019. Exhibition Schedule: International Center of Photography, New York, September 24, 2021–January 10, 2022

• A book we need right now—a riveting look at the fractures in contemporary American society • Third book by this award-winning, New York Times–published photographer and HBO documentary filmmaker • A compelling blend of photographs and personal narrative make this at turns subversively funny and gut-wrenchingly familiar

US $50.00 / CDN $65.00 / UK £40.00 9 ½ × 10 ¾ in. (24.1 × 27.3 cm) 200 pages 85 four-color images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-491-2 September 2021 Limited-edition print available

Fall 2021

Gillian Laub’s photographs of her family from the past twenty years, now collected in one volume, explore the ways society’s biggest questions are revealed in our most intimate relationships. Family Matters zeroes in on the artist’s family as an example of the way Donald Trump’s knack for sowing discord and division has impacted communities, individuals, and households across the country. As Laub explains, “I began to unpack my relationship to my relatives—which turned out to be much more indicative of my relationship to the outside world than I had ever thought, and the key to exploring questions I had about the effects of wealth, vanity, childhood, aging, fragility, political conflict, religious traditions, and mortality.” These issues became tangible in 2016, when Laub and her parents found themselves on opposing sides of the most divisive presidential election in recent US history; and further exacerbated in the lead-up to the 2020 election, in the wake of a global pandemic and protests in support of Black Lives Matter. Family Matters reveals Laub’s willingness to confront ideas of privilege and unity, and to expose the fault lines and vulnerabilities of her relatives and herself. Ultimately, Family Matters celebrates the resiliency and power of family—including the family we choose—in the face of divisive rhetoric. In doing so, it holds up a highly personalized mirror to the social and political divides in the United States today. aperture.org/books

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Philip Montgomery: American Mirror Photographs by Philip Montgomery Essays by Jelani Cobb and Patrick Radden Keefe Philip Montgomery (born in California, 1988) has published photography covering American politics, culture, and society in numerous magazines and newspapers, including the New Yorker, Vanity Fair, New York Times Magazine, Zeit Magazin, TIME, Harper’s, Guardian, Aperture, and Foam Magazine. In 2018, he received a National Magazine Award for his reporting on the opioid epidemic in the US. Jelani Cobb is Ira A. Lipman Professor of Journalism at Columbia University, New York. He is author of The Substance of Hope: Barack Obama and the Paradox of Progress (2010) and editor of The Essential Harold Cruse: A Reader (2002) and The Essential Kerner Commission Report: The Landmark Study on Race, Inequality, and Police Violence (2021). A staff writer at the New Yorker, Cobb has also been published in the Washington Post, New Republic, Essence, Vibe, the Progressive, and TheRoot.com. Patrick Radden Keefe is the author of Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty (2021) and the New York Times best-seller Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland (2019). He is a staff writer at the New Yorker and creator and host of the podcast Wind of Change.

• First book by one of the most exciting young photojournalists working today • Iconic photographs of turning points in recent American history • Featuring award-winning stories published in the New York Times Magazine and the New Yorker “Montgomery’s photographs capture the reality of Americans in crisis, in all our flawed, tragic, ridiculous glory.” —Patrick Radden Keefe, author of Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty

US $60.00 / CDN $81.00 / UK £45.00 9 ⅝ × 12 ½ in. (24.5 × 32 cm) 160 pages 71 tritone images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-518-6 December 2021

Fall 2021

American Mirror is award-winning photographer Philip Montgomery’s dramatic chronicle of the United States at a time of profound change. Through his intimate and powerful reporting and a signature black-and-white style, Montgomery reveals the fault lines in American society, from police violence and the opioid addiction crisis to the COVID-19 pandemic and the demonstrations in support of Black lives. Yet in his unflinching images, we also see moments of grace and sacrifice, glimmers of solidarity and tireless advocates for democracy. Like Dorothea Lange and Walker Evans before him, Montgomery has made an unforgettable testament of a nation at a crossroads. aperture.org/books

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Gregory Crewdson: Alone Street Photographs by Gregory Crewdson Introduction by Joyce Carol Oates Interview with the artist by Cate Blanchett Gregory Crewdson (born in Brooklyn, 1962) is a graduate of the Yale School of Art, New Haven, Connecticut, where he is now director of graduate studies in photography. His series Beneath the Roses is subject of the 2012 documentary Gregory Crewdson: Brief Encounters. Crewdson’s awards include a Skowhegan Medal for Photography, National Endowment for the Arts Visual Artists Fellowship, and Aaron Siskind Foundation Individual Photographer’s Fellowship. His prior books include Twilight (2002), Beneath the Roses (2008), Cathedral of the Pines (Aperture, 2016), and An Eclipse of Moths (Aperture, 2020). Crewdson is represented internationally by Gagosian Gallery. Cate Blanchett is an actor, producer, artistic director, and humanitarian. In addition to her two Academy Awards and three British Academy Film Awards, she served as jury president of the 2018 Cannes Film Festival and the 2020 Venice International Film Festival. She was appointed a Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French minister of culture, has been awarded the Companion of the Order of Australia in the General Division, and serves as a Global Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). Joyce Carol Oates is an author and poet whose books, short stories, and collected writings have been recognized via the National Book Award, O. Henry Award, National Humanities Medal, Norman Mailer Prize for Lifetime Achievement, and PEN/Malamud Award, among others. She is the Roger S. Berlind Distinguished Professor of the Humanities at Princeton University, New Jersey, and has been a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters since 1978.

• Ten years of work by a luminary in contemporary art, gathered for the first time in a single volume • Revelatory contributions by Joyce Carol Oates and Cate Blanchett • Includes never-before-published, behind-the-scenes images and commentary from the artist and crew

US $65.00 / CDN $88.00 / UK £50.00 12 ¾ × 9 ½ in. (32.4 × 24.1 cm) 180 pages 47 four-color images with 50 four-color illustrations Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-513-1 November 2021 Limited-edition print available

Fall 2021

Alone Street brings together two major bodies of work by Gregory Crewdson, Cathedral of the Pines (Aperture, 2016) and An Eclipse of Moths (Aperture, 2020), in a single, elegant, and affordable monograph. Both series expand on the artist’s obsessive exploration of the psychogeography of small-town, post-industrial New England, and underscore the precision and depth of Crewdson’s unique mode of photographic storytelling. In each image, light, color, and carefully crafted scenography evoke the feeling that, as art historian Alexander Nemerov has astutely described, “all that ever happened in these places seems crystallized in his tableaux, as if the quiet melancholy of Crewdson’s scenes gathered the unruly sorrows and other littleguessed feelings of people long-gone who once stood on those spots.” In addition to the full set of images from each series, Alone Street presents a selection of behind-the-scenes images and storyboards, revealing the extensive preparation and planning that went into making each work. aperture.org/books

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Rinko Kawauchi: Illuminance The Tenth Anniversary Edition Photographs by Rinko Kawauchi Essays by David Chandler, Lesley A. Martin, and Masatake Shinohara Rinko Kawauchi (born in Shiga, Japan, 1972) studied graphic design and photography at Seian University of Art and Design, Otsu, Japan. She has published over twenty-five books of her work, including Hanako, Utatane, and Hanabi, a trio of “first books” published simultaneously in 2001. Her work is collected and exhibited widely, and she won a Kimura Ihei Photography Award (2002) and ICP Infinity Award in Art (2009); and was shortlisted for the Deutsche Börse Photography Prize (2012). Kawauchi lives and works in Tokyo. David Chandler is professor of photography at the University of Plymouth, UK. He has held various curatorial roles in museums and galleries, including at the National Portrait Gallery, London (1982–88) and Photographers’ Gallery, London (1988–95); and as the director of Photoworks in Brighton, UK (1997–2010). Lesley A. Martin is creative director of Aperture Foundation and publisher of The PhotoBook Review. Masatake Shinohara is associate professor at Kyoto University, with a primary focus on contemporary philosophy, environmental humanities, architecture, and art. In 2016, he served as cocurator of the Japan Pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale.

• Reissue of a best-selling, out-of-print contemporary classic • Illuminance defines the compelling lyricism of contemporary Japanese photography • If you buy only one book by Rinko Kawauchi, this is it

US $65.00 / CDN $88.00 / UK £50.00 8 ¼ × 11 in. (21 × 28 cm) 384 pages 130 four-color images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-514-8 November 2021 Limited-edition print available

Fall 2021

Ten years after publishing Illuminance in 2011, Aperture is delighted to bring this beloved book back into print, retaining Rinko Kawauchi’s original sequence and signature melding of keenly observed gestures, quotidian detail, and a finely honed palette. On the book’s original release, Alec Soth declared Illuminance “an exquisitely produced monograph [that] should make Rinko a household name.” In addition to the original text by curator David Chandler, the expanded edition includes new texts by philosopher Masatake Shinohara and Aperture's creative director, Lesley A. Martin, contributing new context to and perspective on Kawauchi's influential work. Extraordinarily poetic, brimming with imagination and sensibility, and following international acclaim, this exquisite tenth anniversary edition will entice lovers of photography once again. aperture.org/books

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Limited-Edition Books: New Releases Viviane Sassen: Venus & Mercury Photographs by Viviane Sassen Poems by Marjolijn van Heemstra; text by Jerry Stafford Art direction and design by Irma Boom Viviane Sassen (born in Amsterdam, 1972) is an acclaimed fine-art and fashion photographer. She has received numerous awards for her publications and work, including the Dutch art prize Prix de Rome and an ICP Infinity Award. Marjolijn van Heemstra is a Dutch poet, novelist, and playwright. Her awardwinning books include If Moses Had Been More Persistent (2009), The Last of the Aedemas (2012), and In Search of a Name (2020); Jerry Stafford is an author and creative director. His work has appeared in Aperture, the New York Times, and W, among other publications.

A storied site of history, opulence, and political power, France’s Palace of Versailles has long captured the imagination of both the public and many acclaimed photographers. In 2018, celebrated Dutch photographer Viviane Sassen was invited to make a series of photographs throughout Versailles’s vast grounds. For six months, she photographed extravagant gardens, gilded interiors, and even Marie Antoinette’s correspondence. Venus & Mercury is brimming with Sassen’s surprising, pigmentsplashed photomontages. Drawn to the bodies represented in the palace’s many marble statues, Sassen reconfigured them to create hybrid forms that call to mind Surrealist art. This book also includes a series of poems by writer Marjolijn van Heemstra that allude to histories of intrigue in court society. Conceived and designed by iconic bookmaker Irma Boom, Venus & Mercury is limited to one thousand copies and comes packaged in a unique box, each individually splattered by Sassen with paint.

US $150.00 / UK £120.00 9 ½ × 11 ¾ in. (24.1 × 30 cm) 172 pages 104 images Softcover with gatefold flaps packaged in a unique custom box Printed in a limited edition of 1,000 copies December 2021 Please contact orders@aperture.org to purchase

David Benjamin Sherry: Pink Genesis Photographs by David Benjamin Sherry Essay by Lucy Gallun Designed by A2/SW/HK David Benjamin Sherry (born in Stony Brook, New York, 1981) lives and works in Santa Fe, New Mexico. He received his BFA in photography from the Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, and his MFA in photography from Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut. His work has been exhibited extensively in group and solo exhibitions and is in the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; and Saatchi Collection, London, among others. Lucy Gallun is associate curator of photography at the Museum of Modern Art, New York.

David Benjamin Sherry is a magician of the darkroom. Celebrated for his use of vivid color and his skill with traditional analog photographic techniques, he has established himself as a leading voice in contemporary photography. His work has often examined the landscapes of the American West and the environmental challenges the region faces. Pink Genesis introduces Sherry’s equally intriguing but lesserknown series of striking, large-scale, cameraless color photograms, laboriously made by hand in the darkroom. Using cardboard masks to create mesmerizing geometric forms that reference histories of photography, as well as artists such as Josef Albers and James Turrell, Sherry captivates viewers with a fresh way of seeing. This book, the first dedicated to Sherry’s photograms, collects twenty-nine of these exquisite and unique works that delight in the pleasures of form, color, and coded Queer reference. Winter 2021

aperture.org/books

US $150.00 / UK £120.00 11 × 14 ½ in. (27.9 × 36.8 cm) 80 pages 29 images (including four gatefolds) Hardcover in a cloth slipcase with die-cut triangle Printed in a limited edition of 750 copies Signed and numbered by the artist December 2021 Please contact orders@aperture.org to purchase

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Limited-Edition Books: Also Available Vik Muniz: Postcards from Nowhere Photographs by Vik Muniz Vik Muniz (born in São Paulo, 1961) is a prolific, internationally recognized artist, whose signature style appropriates and reinterprets iconic images of our time. His many publications include Reflex: A Vik Muniz Primer (Aperture, 2005) and Vik Muniz: Everything So Far, Catalogue Raisonné 1987–2015 (2015). Waste Land, a documentary about his work in the favelas and landfills around Rio de Janeiro, was nominated for an Academy Award in 2010.

Vik Muniz’s series Postcards from Nowhere grapples with how, through photographs, we have come to “see” and understand distant yet iconic sites we may never actually view with our own eyes. “The images we hold in our heads are an assemblage,” notes Muniz. “They are an amalgam of every image of those locations that we have ever seen.” More critically, the series serves as an homage not just to the quasi-obsolete artifact of the picture postcard, but to a way of life that has now been put into sharp relief. Muniz’s images—created out of collaged pieces of vintage postcards from the artist’s personal collection—materialize the experience and longing of travel, triangulating between the traveler, a distant location, and the recipient. Volume I presents thirty-two single postcards displaying each of the images in the series. Volume II presents a series of thirty-six postcards that, when assembled, can be viewed as a single, large-scale work of 30 by 40 inches.

US $250.00 / UK £200.00 Slipcase: 9 ¼ × 12  × 2  in. (23.5 × 30.8 × 5.4 cm) Individual volumes: 8 × 10 ¼ in. (20.3 × 26 cm) each Faux leatherbound two-volume album with slipcase Volume 1: 16 album sleeves featuring 32 four-color postcards Volume 2: 18 album sleeves featuring 36 four-color postcards Printed in a limited edition of 500 copies Please contact orders@aperture.org to purchase

Gregory Crewdson: An Eclipse of Moths Photographs by Gregory Crewdson Text by Jeff Tweedy Gregory Crewdson (born in Brooklyn, 1962) is a graduate of the Yale School of Art, where he is now director of graduate studies in photography. His series Beneath the Roses is the subject of the 2012 documentary Gregory Crewdson: Brief Encounters. His work has been exhibited widely, including in a survey that toured throughout Europe from 2005 to 2008. Crewdson’s awards include a Skowhegan Medal for Photography, National Endowment for the Arts Visual Artists Fellowship, and Aaron Siskind Foundation Individual Photographer’s Fellowship. His books include Twilight (2002), Beneath the Roses (2008), and Cathedral of the Pines (Aperture, 2016). Jeff Tweedy is a musician, songwriter, and record producer. He is the singer and guitarist of the band Wilco, which has released eleven studio albums to date.

An Eclipse of Moths extends Gregory Crewdson’s obsessive exploration of the small-town, postindustrial American landscape. Each of these sixteen, never-before-published images is composed at a cinematic scale with the artist’s signature auteurial care. Downed streetlights, abandoned baby carriages, and decommissioned carnival rides set the scene for a cast of classic Crewdsonian characters—full of equal parts yearning and ennui. This collection of images is offered in a limitededition, slipcased volume, sumptuously produced at a scale that offers an immersive experience of each of these carefully crafted scenes. 42

US $250.00 / UK £200.00 19 ½ × 11 in. (49.5 × 27.9 cm) 32 pages 16 images Softcover with clothbound slipcase Printed in a limited edition of 750 copies Signed and numbered by the artist Please contact orders@aperture.org to purchase


Daniel Gordon: Houseplants Photographs by Daniel Gordon Pop-ups by Simon Arizpe Daniel Gordon (born in Boston, 1980) earned a BA from Bard College in 2004 and an MFA from the Yale School of Art in 2006. Notable group exhibitions include New Photography 2009 at the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Greater New York 2010 at MoMA PS1, New York; and Cut! Paper Play in Contemporary Photography at the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles (2018). He is author of Still Lifes, Portraits, and Parts (2013); Flowers and Shadows (2011); and Flying Pictures (2009). In 2014, he won the Foam Paul Huf Award and had a solo exhibition at Foam, Amsterdam.

This highly collectible, limited-edition book is a work of art in itself, rendering Daniel Gordon’s sculptural forms into a new layer of materiality and animating them in a pop-up performance. The book consists of six works in pop-up form, some featuring simple plants, others unfolding more elaborate tableaux. Inspired by his interest in the popularity of certain subjects on the internet—houseplants among them—Gordon meticulously cuts up pictures found online to create sculptural and fantastical still lifes. His mix of realistic and unnatural colors and obvious construction renders the objects slightly off. “Without seams and faults and limitations, my project would be very different,” Gordon says. “The seamlessness of the ether is boring to me, but the materialization of that ether, I think, can be very interesting.” Playfully combining digital and analog processes, perfection and imperfection, as well as high and low cultural references, his still lifes push the boundaries of photography, sculpture, painting, and the cutout.

US $150.00 / UK £120.00 9 × 11 in. (23 × 28 cm) 12 pages 6 pop-ups Casebound Produced in a limited edition of 1,000 copies Please contact orders@aperture.org to purchase Limited-edition print available

James Welling: Choreograph Photographs by and conversation with James Welling Essay by Lisa Hostetler James Welling (born in Hartford, Connecticut, 1951) has held recent solo exhibitions at SMAK, Ghent, Belgium; Fotomuseum Winterthur, Switzerland; and the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles. He is recipient of an ICP Infinity Award and DG Bank-Forder Prize in Photography. James Welling: Monograph (Aperture, 2013) is a thirty-five-year survey of his work. Welling is currently a lecturer at Princeton University. Lisa Hostetler is curator-in-charge of the George Eastman Museum’s Department of Photography.

Choreograph extends James Welling’s iconic experiments with photography and color into the realm of dance, landscape, and architecture, yielding visually electrifying imagery. To create Choreograph, Welling photographed dancers performing in New York, Philadelphia, Boston, and Los Angeles, ultimately combining these images with landscapes and architecture. In a multichannel hack, Welling attains “pathological color”—the purposeful misuse of imaging technologies as a way to short-circuit conventions of photographic representation. Welling notes: “To my surprise, the buildings and landscapes that I used often seem to function like theatrical stages for the dancers.” Lisa Hostetler, curator of photographs at the George Eastman Museum, contributes an essay that puts this body of work into the context of Welling’s larger output, asserting that Choreograph functions as an antidote to modernistic ideas about photography. This volume, printed in the United States with an extended ink range that captures the work’s wild array of vibrant colors, accompanied an exhibition of the same name at the George Eastman Museum, Rochester, New York, July 26, 2020–January 3, 2021. Fall 2020

aperture.org/books

US $80.00 / UK £65.00 11 ⅝ × 9 in. (29.5 × 22.9 cm) 104 pages 75 images Hardcover Printed in the US in a limited edition of 1,000 copies Please contact orders@aperture.org to purchase

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From Sara Cwynar: Glass Life © Sara Cwynar (see page 54)

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Backlist Highlights

Spring 2022

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The Photography Workshop Series

Dawoud Bey on Photographing People and Communities Introduction by Brian Ulrich

Larry Fink on Composition and Improvisation Introduction by Lisa Kereszi

Todd Hido on Landscapes, Interiors, and the Nude Introduction by Gregory Halpern

US $29.95 / CDN $41.95 / UK £22.00 7 ½ × 10 in. (19 × 25.4 cm) 128 pages; 70 images Paperback with flaps ISBN 978-1-59711-337-3

US $29.95 / CDN $41.95 / UK £22.00 7 ½ × 10 in. (19 × 25.4 cm) 128 pages; 50 images Paperback with flaps 52995 ISBN 978-1-59711-273-4 Limited-edition print available

US $29.95 / CDN $41.95 / UK £22.00 7 ½ × 10 in. (19 × 25.4 cm) 128 pages; 73 images Paperback with flaps 52995 ISBN 978-1-59711-297-0

9 781597 112734

Mary Ellen Mark on the Portrait and the Moment Introduction by Laurie Rae Baxter US $29.95 / CDN $41.95 / UK £22.00 7 ½ × 10 in. (19 × 25.4 cm) 128 pages; 69 images Paperback with flaps 52995 ISBN 978-1-59711-316-8

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Graciela Iturbide: The Photography Workshop Series Introduction by Alfonso Morales Carrillo and Mauricio Maillé US $29.95 / CDN $41.95 / UK £22.00 7 ½ × 10 in. (19 × 25.4 cm) 128 pages; 70 images Paperback with flaps ISBN 978-1-59711-370-0

9 781597 112970

Richard Misrach on Landscape and Meaning Introduction by Lucas Foglia and Meghann Riepenhoff

Alex Webb and Rebecca Norris Webb on Street Photography and the Poetic Image Introduction by Teju Cole

US $29.95 / CDN $41.95 / UK £22.00 7 ½ × 10 in. (19 × 25.4 cm) 128 pages; 83 images Paperback with flaps ISBN 978-1-59711-477-6

US $29.95 / CDN $41.95 / UK £22.00 7 ½ × 10 in. (19 × 25.4 cm) 128 pages; 73 images 52995 Paperback with flaps ISBN 978-1-59711-257-4

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Children’s Books

The Colors We Share By Angélica Dass US $16.95 / CDN $22.95 / UK £12.95 8  × 8  in. (21.9 × 21.9 cm) 44 pages; 1,220 images Hardcover ISBN US & Canada: 978-1-59711-501-8 ISBN Rest of World: 978-1-59711-509-4

Eyes Open: 23 Photography Projects for Curious Kids By Susan Meiselas US $24.95 / CDN $32.95 / UK £19.95 8 ¼ × 11 ¼ in. (21 × 28.25 cm) 160 pages; 121 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-469-1

This Equals That By Jason Fulford and Tamara Shopsin US $19.95 / CDN $27.95 / UK £15.95 7 ¾ × 7 ¾ in. (19.7 × 19.7 cm) 80 pages; 40 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-288-8 ISBN 978-1-59711-288-8 51995 Limited-edition print available

9 781597 112888

Children´s Books

Go Photo! An Activity Book for Kids Text and photographs by Alice Proujansky

Seeing Things: A Kid’s Guide to Looking at Photographs By Joel Meyerowitz

US $19.95 / CDN $27.95 / UK £14.95 8 ½ × 10 ⅝ in. (21.6 × 27 cm) 108 pages; 85 images ISBN: 978-1-59711-355-7 51995 Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-355-7

US $24.95 / CDN $34.95 / UK £15.95 8 ¼ × 11 ⅛ in. (21 × 28.4 cm) 80 pages; 30 images Hardcover 52495 ISBN 978-1-59711-315-1

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Aperture Masters of Photography

Berenice Abbott Introduction and commentary by Julia Van Haaften

Henri Cartier-Bresson Introduction and commentary by Clément Chéroux

Walker Evans Introduction and commentary by David Campany

Dorothea Lange Introduction and commentary by Linda Gordon

US $18.95 / CDN $26.95 / UK £12.00 8 × 8 in. (20.3 × 20.3 cm) 96 pages; 42 images Hardcover with jacket 51895 ISBN 978-1-59711-312-0

US $19.95 / CDN $27.95 / UK £12.95 8 × 8 in. (20.3 × 20.3 cm) 96 pages; 42 images 51995 Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-287-1

US $18.95 / CDN $26.95 / UK £12.00 8 × 8 in. (20.3 × 20.3 cm) 96 pages; 42 images Hardcover with jacket 51895 ISBN 978-1-59711-343-4

US $18.95 / CDN $26.95 / UK £12.00 8 × 8 in. (20.3 × 20.3 cm) 96 pages; 42 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-295-6 5 1available 895 Limited-edition print

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Paul Strand Introduction and commentary by Peter Barberie US $18.95 / CDN $26.95 / UK £12.00 8 × 8 in. (20.3 × 20.3 cm) 96 pages; 42 images Hardcover with jacket 51895 ISBN 978-1-59711-286-4 Limited-edition print available

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Aperture Masters of Photography


Anthologies and Compilations

ISBN 978-1-59711-288-8 51995

9 781597 112888

The Chinese Photobook: From the 1900s to the Present Edited by Martin Parr and WassinkLundgren US $80.00 / CDN $110.00 / UK £50.00 10 × 11 ⅜ in. (25.5 × 28.8 cm) 448 pages; 1,000 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-375-5 58000

Color Rush: American Color Photography from Stieglitz to Sherman By Lisa Hostetler and Katherine A. Bussard US $60.00 / CDN $83.95 / UK £40.00 9 ½ × 11 ½ in. (24.1 × 29.2 cm) 244 pages; 202 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-226-0 Copublished by Aperture 5 6 0 0 0 and the Milwaukee Art Museum

Dandy Lion: The Black Dandy and Street Style By Shantrelle P. Lewis

The Dutch Photobook: A Thematic Selection from 1945 Onwards By Frits Gierstberg and Rik Suermondt

US $35.00 / CDN $47.95 / UK £25.00 7 ½ × 10 in. (19 × 25.4 cm) 173 pages; 140 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-389-2 Limited-edition print available

US $75.00 / CDN $104.95 / UK £50.00 9 ½ × 11 in. (24.1 × 27.9 cm) 288 pages; 820 images 57500 Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-200-0

9 781597 112000

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Fashion Photography: The Story in 180 Pictures By Eugénie Shinkle US $50.00 / CDN $67.50 9 ⅔ × 11  in. (24.5 × 29 cm) 272 pages; 185 images

Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-363-2 Available in US & Canada only

Feast for the Eyes: The Story of Food in Photography By Susan Bright US $60.00 / CDN $80.95 / UK £45.00 9 ½ × 11 ½ in. (24.1 × 29 cm) 320 pages; 250 images Hardcover with tip-on ISBN 978-1-59711-361-8 Limited-edition print available

The Latin American Photobook Edited by Horacio Fernández US $75.00 / CDN $104.95 / UK £45.00 9 × 12 in. (22.9 × 30.5 cm) 256 pages; 817 images Hardcover 57500 ISBN 978-1-59711-189-8

Looking Again: Photography at the New Orleans Museum of Art By Russell Lord US $80.00 / CDN $105.00 / UK £60.00 9 ½ × 11 ½ in. (24.5 × 29 cm) 294 pages; 131 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-442-4 Copublished by Aperture and the New Orleans Museum of Art

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Anthologies and Compilations

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Anthologies and Compilations

The New Black Vanguard: Photography between Art and Fashion By Antwaun Sargent US $50.00 / CDN $65.00 / UK £40.00 8 ¼ × 11 in. (21 × 27.9 cm) 312 pages; 250 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-468-4 Limited-edition print available

The New York Times Magazine Photographs Edited by Kathy Ryan US $75.00 / CDN $104.95 / UK £50.00 9 ½ × 11 ½ in. (24.1 × 29.2 cm) 448 pages; 500 images Hardcover with jacket 57500 ISBN 978-1-59711-146-1 Limited-edition print available

The Photographer’s Cookbook Essay by Lisa Hostetler US $29.95 / CDN $41.95 / UK £19.95 6 ⅜ × 8 ½ in. (16.2 × 21.6 cm) 160 pages; 50 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-357-1 Copublished by Aperture and the 52995 George Eastman Museum

The Photographer in the Garden By Jamie M. Allen and Sarah Anne McNear US $50.00 / CDN $65.00 / UK £40.00 9 ½ × 11 ½ in. (24.5 × 29 cm) 256 pages; 232 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-373-1 Limited-edition print available

Copublished by Aperture and the George Eastman Museum

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Photo No-Nos: Meditations on What Not to Photograph Edited by Jason Fulford US $24.95 / CDN $32.95 / UK £19.95 6 × 9 in. (15.2 × 22.9 cm) 320 pages 96 images Paperback ISBN 978-1-59711-499-8

The Photographer’s Playbook: 307 Assignments and Ideas Edited by Jason Fulford and Gregory Halpern US $24.95 / CDN $34.95 / UK £19.95 6 × 9 in. (15.2 × 22.9 cm) 428 pages; 26 images Paperback 52495 ISBN 978-1-59711-247-5

PhotoWork: Forty Photographers on Process and Practice Edited and introduced by Sasha Wolf US $24.95 / CDN $32.95 / UK £19.95 6 × 9 in. (15.2 × 22.9 cm) 256 pages Paperback with flaps ISBN 978-1-59711-459-2

Photography Is Magic By Charlotte Cotton US $49.95 / CDN $69.95 / UK £35.00 8 × 10 ⅓ in. (20.32 × 26.29 cm) 384 pages; 311 images Paperback with flaps ISBN 978-1-59711-331-1 5 4available 995 Limited-edition print

9 781597 113311 9 781597 112475

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Anthologies and Compilations

Picturing America’s National Parks By Jamie M. Allen US $35.00 / CDN $47.00 / UK £25.00 9 ⅝ × 11 ⅜ in. (24.5 × 29 cm) 128 pages; 120 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-452-3

The Radical Eye: Iconic Modernist Photography from the Sir Elton John Collection US $60.00 / CDN $83.95 8 ½ × 11 ⅜ in. (29 × 21.8 cm) 240 pages; 150 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-386-1 5 6 0 0 0only Available in US & Canada

Rochester 585/716: A Postcards from America Project Photographs by Magnum photographers US $75.00 / CDN $104.95 / UK £50.00 8 ½ × 11 in. (21.6 × 28 cm) 452 pages; 1,000 images Paperback with C-print ISBN 978-1-59711-340-3 Copublished by Aperture and Pier 24 57500 Photography

Seeing Science: How Photography Reveals the Universe By Marvin Heiferman US $39.95 / CDN $55.00 / UK £30.00 8 ⅝ × 10 in. (21.1 × 25.4 cm) 224 pages; 300 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-447-9 Copublished by Aperture and the University of Maryland, Baltimore County

CDN 9 US 7 8 1$40.00 5 9 7 1 1/ 38 6 1 $53.95 Paperback with flaps ISBN 978-1-59711-390-8

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Self Publish, Be Happy: A DIY Photobook Manual and Manifesto By Bruno Ceschel US $29.95 / CDN $41.95 / UK £19.95 8 ¼ × 10 ⅞ in. (21 × 27.6 cm) 512 pages; 280 illustrations ISBN: 978-1-59711-344-1 Paperback with flaps 52995 ISBN 978-1-59711-344-1

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Anthologies and Compilations

The San Quentin Project By Nigel Poor Contributions by Reginald Dwayne Betts, George Mesro Coles-El, Rachel Kushner, Michael Nelson, Ruben Ramirez, and Lisa Sutcliffe US $45.00 / CDN $60.00 / UK £40.00 8 ½ × 11 in. (21.5 × 28 cm) 168 pages; 97 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-492-9

To Make Their Own Way in the World: The Enduring Legacy of the Zealy Daguerreotypes Edited by Ilisa Barbash, Molly Rogers, and Deborah Willis Foreword by Henry Louis Gates Jr. Photographic essay by Carrie Mae Weems US $60.00 / CDN $81.00 / UK £50.00 6 ½ × 9 ¼ in. (16.5 × 23.5 cm) 488 pages; 230 images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-478-3 Copublished by Aperture and Peabody Museum Press

aperture.org/books

Total Records: Photography and the Art of the Album Cover Edited by Antoine de Beaupré US $29.95 / CDN $40.00 / UK $£19.95 8 ¼ × 8 ¼ in. (21 × 21 cm) 448 pages; 444 images Paperback with flaps 52995 ISBN 978-1-59711-384-7

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Monographs and Artist Books

Diane Arbus: A box of ten photographs Essay by John P. Jacob US $80.00 / CDN $105.00 / UK £60.00 11 × 14 in. (28 × 35.5 cm) 110 pages; 43 images Hardcover enclosed in a slipcase ISBN 978-1-59711-439-4 Published by Aperture in association with

the Smithsonian American Art Museum

Diane Arbus: A Chronology By Elisabeth Sussman and Doon Arbus Biographies by Jeff L. Rosenheim

Diane Arbus: An Aperture Monograph Edited and designed by Doon Arbus and Marvin Israel

Diane Arbus: Magazine Work Photographs and text by Diane Arbus Essay by Thomas W. Southall

US $29.95 / CDN $41.95 / UK £19.95 8 × 6 ½ in. (20.3 × 16.5 cm) 192 pages 52995 Paperback with flaps ISBN 978-1-59711-179-9

US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £45.00 9 ¼ × 11 in. (23.5 × 27.9 cm) 184 pages; 80 images Hardcover with jacket 56500 ISBN 978-1-59711-174-4

US $35.00 / CDN $48.95 / UK £19.95 9 ¼ × 11 in. (23.5 × 27.9 cm) 176 pages; 140 images 53500 Paperback ISBN 978-0-89381-233-1

9 781597 111799

9 Paperback 781597 111744 with flaps

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US $39.95 / CDN $55.95 / UK £25.00 53995 ISBN 978-1-59711-175-1

9 781597 111751

Untitled: Diane Arbus Edited and with an afterword by Doon Arbus

Sama Alshaibi: Sand Rushes In Edited and with an interview by Isabella Ellaheh Hughes

US $75.00 / CDN $104.95 / UK £45.00 11 × 14 in. (27.9 × 35.6 cm) 112 pages; 51 images 57500 Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-190-4

US $80.00 / CDN $110.95 / UK £50.00 9 ½ × 12 ½ in. (24.1 × 31.8 cm) 112 pages; 108 images and video stills Clothbound with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-308-3 5 8available 000 Limited-edition print

This Is Mars: Midi Edition Edited and designed by Xavier Barral

US $100.00 / CDN $140.00 / UK £65.00 11 ½ × 13 ¾ in. (30.2 × 35.4 cm) 292 pages; 150 images Hardcover with jacket 10000 ISBN 978-1-59711-258-1

US $45.00 / CDN $60.95 / UK £35.00 6 ¾ × 9 ½ in. (17.1 × 24.1 cm) 296 pages; 150 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-415-8

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This Is Mars Edited and designed by Xavier Barral

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Monographs and Artist Books

Taysir Batniji: Home Away from Home Photographs and text by Taysir Batniji US $60.00 / CDN $81.00 / UK £45.00 8 ¾ × 10 ¾ in. (22.2 × 27.3 cm) 196 pages; 180 images Flexibind ISBN 978-1-59711-446-2 Copublished by Aperture and Fondation d’entreprise Hermès

Stonework and Lime Kilns Photographs by Bernd and Hilla Becher

Olivia Bee: Kids in Love Interview by Tavi Gevinson

US $85.00 / CDN $120.00 / UK £55.00 10 ⅝ × 11 ⅜ in. (27 × 29 cm) 244 pages; 232 images Hardcover with jacket 58500 ISBN 978-1-59711-252-9

US $39.95 / CDN $55.95 / UK £25.00 8 × 10 in. (20.3 × 25.4 cm) 136 pages; 75 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-345-8 53995 Limited-edition print available

The Last Testament Photographs and texts by Jonas Bendiksen US $50.00 / CDN $67.50 / UK £40.00

6 ½ × 9 ½ in. (16.5 × 24 cm) 464 pages; 174 images Flexibind ISBN 978-1-59711-428-8 A GOST book published by Aperture

9 781597 112529 9 781597 113458

Werner Bischof: Backstory Edited and with text by Marco Bischof US $75.00 / CDN $104.95 / UK £50.00 10 × 11 ⅞ in. (26 × 31 cm) 311 pages; 390 images Hardcover 57500 ISBN 978-1-59711-352-6

9 781597 113526

Monographs and Artist Books

Kwame Brathwaite: Black Is Beautiful Essays by Tanisha C. Ford and Deborah Willis US $40.00 / CDN $55.00 / UK £32.95 8 ½ × 10 ½ in. (21.6 × 27 cm) 144 pages; 91 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-443-1 Limited edition available

Marco Breuer: Early Recordings Essay by Mark Alice Durant

Jo Ann Callis: Other Rooms Essay by Francine Prose

US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £35.00 10 ⅜ × 13 ¼ in. (26.3 × 33.5 cm) 88 pages; 50 images Hardcover 56500 ISBN 978-1-59711-033-4 Limited-edition print available

US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £40.00 9 × 11 ½ in. (22.9 × 29.2 cm) 120 pages; 71 images Hardcover with tip-on 56500 ISBN 978-1-59711-275-8 Limited-edition print available

9 781597 112758

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Monographs and Artist Books

John Chiara: California Essay by Virginia Heckert US $65.00 / CDN $87.50 / UK £45.00 11 × 12 ⅞ in. (27.9 × 32.7 cm) 164 pages; 95 images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-423-3

Limited edition available Copublished by Aperture and Pier 24 Photography

William Christenberry: Kodachromes Essay by Richard B. Woodward

Negative Publicity: Artefacts of Extraordinary Rendition By Edmund Clark and Crofton Black

US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £45.00 9 ⅔ × 11  in. (23.9 × 29 cm) 176 pages; 115 images Hardcover with tip-on 56500 ISBN 978-1-59711-147-8 Limited-edition print available

US $80.00 / CDN $100.00 / UK £65.00 8 ½ × 11 ⅝ in. (21.6 × 29.7 cm) 288 pages plus 14 gatefolds 35 images and 83 reproductions Spiralbound hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-351-9 Copublished by Aperture and 57500 Magnum Foundation

9 781597 111478

Barbara Crane: Private Views Text by Barbara Hitchcock US $39.95 / CDN $55.95 / UK £25.00 7 × 10 in. (17.8 × 25.4 cm) 112 pages; 100 images Clothbound with tip-on ISBN 978-1-59711-096-9 Limited-edition print available ISBN 978-1-59711-096-9 5 3 9 9 5and the Copublished by Aperture Stephen Daiter Gallery

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Lynne Cohen: Occupied Territory Essay by Britt Salvesen US $60.00 / CDN $83.95 / UK £40.00 9  × 11 ½ in. (24.4 × 29.2 cm) 144 pages; 110 images Hardcover with acetate jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-145-4 Limited-edition print available 5 6 0 0 0 and the Copublished by Aperture Stephen Daiter Gallery

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Gregory Crewdson: Cathedral of the Pines Essay by Alexander Nemerov US $80.00 / CDN $110.95 / UK £50.00 15 ½ × 12 in. (39.4 × 30.5 cm) 76 pages; 31 images Clothbound 58000 ISBN 978-1-59711-350-2

Robert Cumming: The Difficulties of Nonsense Edited and with an essay by Sarah Bay Gachot US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £45.00 9 × 10 ½ in. (23 × 27 cm) 180 pages; 150 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-300-7 56500 Limited-edition print available

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Sara Cwynar: Glass Life Essays by Sheila Heti and Legacy Russell Interview by Rose Bouthillier US $65.00 / CDN $88.00 / UK £50.00 8 × 10 ¾ in. (20.3 × 27.3 cm) 200 pages; 175 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-479-0 Limited-edition print available


Monographs and Artist Books

Louise Dahl-Wolfe Texts by Oliva María Rubio, John P. Jacob, and Celina Lunsford

Bruce Davidson: Subway Introduction by Fred Braithwaite (Fab 5 Freddy)

US $60.00 / CDN $83.95 8 ¼ × 11 ¼ in. (21 × 28.5 cm) 256 pages; 137 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-358-8 5 6 0 0 0only Available in US & Canada

US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 11 ⅓ × 11  in. (29.5 × 29 cm) 144 pages; 118 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-194-2 Available in US & Canada only 56500 Limited-edition print available

9 781597 113588

Bruce Davidson: Survey Texts by Charlotte Cotton, Carlos Gollonet, Frits Gierstberg, and Francesco Zanot US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £45.00 9 ½ × 11 in. (24 × 28 cm) 320 pages; 190 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-377-9 Copublished by Aperture 5 6 5 0 0and Fundación MAPFRE

Tim Davis: I’m Looking Through You Photographs and texts by Tim Davis US $50.00 / CDN $65.00 / UK £40.00 6 ½ × 9  in. (16.5 × 23.4 cm) 256 pages; 159 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-498-1 Limited-edition print available

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Bieke Depoorter: As it may be Essay by Ruth Vandewalle US $60.00 / CDN $85.00 / UK £50.00 11 × 10  in. (28 × 26.5 cm) 62 pages plus booklet; 44 images

insert Hardcover with booklet ISBN 978-1-59711-440-0

Jimmy DeSana: Suburban Edited by Dan Nadel and Laurie Simmons US $45.00 / CDN $62.95 / UK £30.00 8 ⅞ × 11 in. (22.6 × 27.9 cm) 96 pages; 45 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-341-0 Limited-edition print available 5 4 5 0 0 and Salon 94 Copublished by Aperture

Chloe Dewe Mathews Caspian: The Elements Essays by Morad Montazami, Sean O’Hagan, and Arnold van Bruggen US $65.00 / CDN $88.00 / UK £50.00 7 ½ × 10 in. (19 × 26 cm) 216 pages; 140 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-444-8 Copublished by Aperture and Peabody Museum Press

Doug DuBois: My Last Day at Seventeen Illustrations by Patrick Lynch US $60.00 / CDN $83.95 / UK £40.00 9 ⅜ × 11 ½ in. (24 × 29.3 cm) 156 pages; 79 images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-313-7 5 6available 000 Limited-edition print

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Monographs and Artist Books

George Dureau, The Photographs Essay by Philip Gefter

Sketch of Paris Photographs by JH Engström

US $60.00 / CDN $83.95 / UK £40.00 10 × 12 in. (25 × 30 cm) 160 pages; 98 images Hardcover with tip-on 56000 ISBN 978-1-59711-284-0

US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £45.00 8 ½ × 11 ⅔ in. (21.6 × 29.6 cm) 314 pages; 250 images 56500 Paperback with slipcover ISBN 978-1-59711-253-6

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Paz Errázuriz: Survey Texts by Juan Vicente Aliaga, Gerardo Mosquera, and Paulina Varas US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £45.00 8  × 10 in. (21.8 × 25.4 cm) 271 pages; 172 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-354-0 Copublished by Aperture and Fundación 56500 MAPFRE

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Elliott Erwitt: Home Around the World Edited and with texts by Jessica S. McDonald US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £45.00 9 × 10 in. (22.9 × 25.4 cm) 312 pages; 250 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-369-4 Copublished by Aperture and the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas 56500 at Austin

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LaToya Ruby Frazier: The Notion of Family Interview by Dawoud Bey US $50.00 / CDN $69.95 / UK £35.00 9 ½ × 10 ¾ in. (24.1 × 27.3 cm) 156 pages; 100 images and 32 video stills Paperback with flaps ISBN 978-1-59711-381-6 5 5available 000 Limited-edition print

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Paul Fusco: RFK Photographs by Paul Fusco Tribute by Senator Edward M. Kennedy Essays by Vicki Goldberg, Norman Mailer, and Evan Thomas US $50.00 / CDN $69.95 / UK £40.00 11 ¾ × 9 ⅔ in. (29.8 × 24.4 cm) 224 pages; 120 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-079-2 Limited-edition print available

Phyllis Galembo: Maske Introduction by Chika Okeke-Agulu US $45.00 / CDN $62.95 / UK £30.00 9 ⅜ × 9 ½ in. (23.8 × 24.1 cm) 208 pages; 106 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-353-3 54500 Limited-edition print available

Luigi Ghirri: It’s Beautiful Here, Isn’t It . . . Edited and with notes by Paola Ghirri Preface by William Eggleston US $60.00 / CDN $81.00 / UK £45.00 11 × 8 ½ in. (27.9 × 21.6 cm) 152 pages; 95 images and 30 illustrations Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-058-7 Limited-edition print available

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Monographs and Artist Books

Judy Glickman Lauder Beyond the Shadows: The Holocaust and the Danish Exception Texts by Elie Wiesel, Michael Berenbaum, and Judith S. Goldstein US $50.00 / CDN $67.50 / UK £40.00 9 ½ × 11 ¾ in. (24.1 × 30 cm) 160 pages; 85 images Clothbound with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-449-3

The Ballad of Sexual Dependency Photographs and text by Nan Goldin US $50.00 / CDN $69.95 / UK £40.00 10 × 9 in. (25.4 × 22.9 cm) 148 pages; 126 images Hardcover with jacket 55000 ISBN 978-1-59711-208-6

Emmet Gowin Essays by Keith F. Davis and Carlos Gollonet

Ethan James Green: Young New York Text by Hari Nef and Michael Schulman

US $69.95 / CDN $89.95 / UK £45.00 9 ½ × 11 ¾ in. (24 × 30 cm) 240 pages; 180 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-261-1 Copublished by Aperture and Fundación MAPFRE5 6 9 9 5

US $45.00 / CDN $60.00 / UK £35.00 8 ¼ × 10 ¼ in. (21 × 26 cm) 128 pages; 55 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-454-7 Limited edition available

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Gail Albert Halaban: Italian Views Essay by Francine Prose

Gail Albert Halaban: Paris Views Essay by Cathy Rémy

US $75.00 / CDN $100.00 / UK £60.00 11 ½ × 14 in. (28.6 × 35.6 cm) 128 pages; 55 images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-451-6 Limited edition available

US $79.95 / CDN $110.95 / UK £50.00 15 × 13 in. (38.1 × 33 cm) 120 pages; 60 images Hardcover 57995 ISBN 978-1-59711-302-1 Limited-edition print available

9 781597 113021

Monographs and Artist Books

Gregory Halpern: Let the Sun Beheaded Be Essay by Clément Chéroux Conversation with Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa US $45.00 / CDN $60.00 / UK £35.00 8 ½ × 11 in. (21.5 × 28 cm) 120 pages; 74 images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-490-5 Copublished by Aperture and Fondation d’entreprise Hermès Limited-edition print available

aperture.org/books

Lyle Ashton Harris: Today I Shall Judge Nothing That Occurs Introduction by Johanna Burton US $60.00 / CDN $80.00 / UK £50.00 7 ⅛ × 9 ½ in. (18 × 24 cm)

296 pages; 155 images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-412-7

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Monographs and Artist Books

Naoya Hatakeyama: Excavating the Future City Essay and coedited by Yasufumi Nakamori US $60.00 / CDN $85.00 / UK £50.00 8 ¾ × 11 ¾ in. (22.2 × 29.6 cm) 280 pages; 160 images Flexibind ISBN 978-1-59711-432-5 Limited edition available

Copublished by Aperture and the Minneapolis Institute of Art

Todd Hido: Intimate Distance: Twenty-Five Years of Photographs Essay by David Campany US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £45.00 9 ½ × 11 ½ in. (24.5 × 29 cm) 272 pages; 300 images Hardcover with fold-out jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-360-1 5 6available 500 Limited-edition print

The Sochi Project: An Atlas of War and Tourism in the Caucasus By Rob Hornstra and Arnold van Bruggen US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £40.00 8 ½ × 10 ⅜ in. (21.6 × 26.4 cm) 392 pages plus 16 inserts 287 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-334-2 5 6available 500 Limited-edition print

Eikoh Hosoe: Kamaitachi With essays by Donald Keene and Shuzo Takiguchi US $60.00 / CDN $83.95 / UK £40.00 9 ½ × 12 ¾ in. (24.1 × 32.4 cm) 112 pages; 48 images Hardcover with jacket 56000 ISBN 978-1-59711-121-8 Limited-edition print available

9 781597 111218 9 781597 113601 9 781597 113342

Pieter Hugo: Kin Short story by Ben Okri

Ametsuchi Photographs by Rinko Kawauchi

US $75.00 / CDN $104.95 / UK £45.00 11 ¾ × 9 ¼ in. (29.8 × 23.5 cm) 164 pages; 80 images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-301-4 5 7available 500 Limited-edition print

US $80.00 / CDN $110.95 / UK £50.00 9  × 12 ¼ in. (24 × 31 cm) 80 pages; 40 images Clothbound with jacket 58000 ISBN 978-1-59711-216-1

9 781597 113014

Illuminance The Tenth Anniversary Edition Photographs by Rinko Kawauchi Essays by David Chandler, Lesley A. Martin, and Masatake Shinohara US $65.00 / CDN $88.00 / UK £50.00 8 ¼ × 11 inches (21 × 28 cm) 384 pages; 130 images Clothbound with tip-on ISBN 978-1-59711-514-8

Halo Photographs and text by Rinko Kawauchi US $70.00 / CDN $94.50 / UK £50.00 9 × 12 ½ in. (23 × 31.5 cm) 96 pages; 48 images Hardcover with bellyband ISBN 978-1-59711-411-0

9 781597 112161

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Monographs and Artist Books

Peter Hujar: Speed of Life By Joel Smith

Josef Koudelka: Gypsies Essay by Will Guy

US $50.00 / CDN $67.95 / UK £40.00 9 ¾ × 11 ¼ in. (24.1 × 27.9 cm) 248 pages; 231 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-414-1 Copublished by Aperture and Fundación MAPFRE

US $85.00 / CDN $120.00 9 ½ × 12 ½ in. (24 × 31.75 cm) 160 pages; 109 images Hardcover with jacket 58500 ISBN 978-1-59711-177-5 Available in US & Canada only

Josef Koudelka: Gypsies Essays by Stuart Alexander and Will Guy US $30.00 / CDN $40.00 6 ⅜ × 8 in. (16.6 × 20.5 cm) 240 pages; 109 images Paperback ISBN 978-1-59711-473-8 Available in US & Canada only

9 781597 111775

Invasion 68: Prague Photographs by Josef Koudelka US $60.00 / CDN $120.00 9 × 12 in. (23 × 31.9 cm) 296 pages; 248 images Paperback ISBN 978-1-59711-068-6 56000 Available in US & Canada only

9 781597 110686

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Koudelka Essays by Robert Delpire and more US $75.00 / CDN $104.95 11 × 11 in. (29 × 27.9 cm) 276 pages; 161 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-030-3 5 7 5 0 0only Available in US & Canada

9 781597 110303

Monographs and Artist Books

Josef Koudelka: Wall Chronology, captions, and lexicon by Ray Dolphin and Gilad Baram

Josef Koudelka: Exiles Commentary with Josef Koudelka and Robert Delpire

Josef Koudelka: Ruins Texts by Alain Schnapp, Héloïse Conésa, and Bernard Latarjet

US $60.00 / CDN $83.95 / UK £40.00 14 ¾ × 10 ¼ in. (37.5 × 26.4 cm) 120 pages; 54 images Clothbound 56000 ISBN 978-1-59711-241-3

US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 11 ¾ × 10 ⅝ in. (29.8 × 27 cm) 180 pages; 75 images Hardcover with jacket 56500 ISBN 978-1-59711-269-7 Available in US & Canada only

US $75.00 / CDN $100.00 12  × 9 ½ in. (31.5 × 24 cm) 368 pages; 171 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-489-9 Available in US & Canada only

9 781597 112413

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Monographs and Artist Books

The Many Lives of Erik Kessels Texts by Francesco Zanot, Sandra S. Phillips, Simon Baker, and Hans Aarsman US $65.00 / CDN $87.95 / UK £50.00 5 × 8 ¼ in. (13 × 21 cm) 576 pages; 450 images Hardcover with slipcase ISBN 978-1-59711-416-5 Copublished by Aperture and CAMERA

Hiroji Kubota: Photographer Preface by Elliott Erwitt

Justine Kurland: Girl Pictures Story by Rebecca Bengal

Justine Kurland: Highway Kind Stories by Lynne Tillman

US $75.00 / CDN $104.95 / UK £50.00 9 × 12 in. (23.75 × 30.5 cm) 512 pages; 400 images Hardcover with jacket 57500 ISBN 978-1-59711-285-7

US $50.00 / CDN $65.00 / UK £40.00 8 ⅞ × 11 in. (22.6 × 28 cm) 144 pages; 76 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-474-5 Limited-edition print available

US $45.00 / CDN $60.00 / UK £35.00 9 ⅛ × 11 ¼ in. (23.1 × 28.5 cm) 160 pages; 85 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-328-1 5 5available 000 Limited-edition print

9 781597 112857 9 781597 113281

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Sergio Larrain Edited and with text by Agnès Sire

Sergio Larrain: London Texts by Roberto Bolaño and Agnès Sire

Sergio Larrain: Valparaíso Texts by Agnès Sire and Pablo Neruda

US $100.00 / CDN $140.00 8 ¼ × 11 ½ in. (21 × 29.2 cm) 400 pages; 247 images Clothbound with tip-on ISBN 978-1-59711-259-8 10000 Available in US & Canada only

US $55.00 / CDN $74.25 7 ¼ × 9 ⅝ in. (18.5 × 24.5 cm) 176 pages; 94 images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-500-1 Available in US & Canada only

US $55.00 / CDN $74.95 6 ½ × 9 ¼ in. (16.5 × 23.5 cm) 212 pages; 120 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-413-4 Available in US & Canada only

Deana Lawson: An Aperture Monograph Texts by Zadie Smith and Arthur Jafa US $85.00 / CDN $115.00 / UK £70.00 11 ⅝ × 13 ¾ in. (29.7 × 35 cm)

104 pages; 40 images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-422-6 Limited edition available

9 781597 112598

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Monographs and Artist Books

An-My Lê: Events Ashore Essay by Geoff Dyer US $89.95 / CDN $125.00 / UK £60.00 13 × 10 ½ in. (33 × 26.7 cm) 192 pages plus 2 gatefolds 125 images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-299-4 5 8available 995 Limited-edition print

9 781597 112994

Danny Lyon: The Bikeriders Photographs and texts by Danny Lyon US $35.00 / CDN $48.95 / UK £25.95 6 ¼ × 9 ¼ in. (15.9 × 23.5 cm) 94 pages; 48 images Clothbound with jacket 53500 ISBN 978-1-59711-264-2

9 781597 112642

Monographs and Artist Books

An-My Lê: On Contested Terrain By Dan Leers Texts by David Finkel and Lisa Sutcliffe Dialogue with An-My Lê and Viet Thanh Nguyen US $65.00 / CDN $88.00 / UK £55.00 9 ¼ × 10 ½ in. (23.5 × 26.6 cm) 204 pages; 128 images Flexibind ISBN 978-1-59711-481-3 Limited-edition print available Copublished by Aperture and the Carnegie Museum of Art

Richard Learoyd: Day for Night Texts by Martin Barnes and Nancy Gryspeerdt

Jeff Chien-Hsing Liao: New York Essays by Sean Corcoran and Justin Davidson

US $150.00 / CDN $210.00 / UK £100.00 12 × 14 ¾ in. (30 × 37 cm) 328 pages; 160 images Hardcover with acetate jacket and bellyband 15000 ISBN 978-1-59711-329-8

US $95.00 / CDN $135.00 / UK £60.00 16 ½ × 13 ⅜ in. (41.1 × 33.9 cm) 160 pages; 100 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-279-6 59500 Limited-edition print available

9 781597 113298

Danny Lyon: The Destruction of Lower Manhattan Photographs and text by Danny Lyon

At Twelve: Portraits of Young Women Photographs and commentary by Sally Mann

US $50.00 / CDN $65.00 / UK £40.00 9 ¼ × 10 ½ in. (23.5 × 26.7 cm) 160 pages; 76 images Clothbound with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-494-3 Limited-edition print available This facsimile of The Destruction of Lower Manhattan has been produced and published in partnership with Fundación ICO.

US $50.00 / CDN $65.00 / UK £40.00 9 ⅜ × 10 ⅞ in. (23.8 × 27.6 cm) 56 pages; 36 images Clothbound with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-458-5

aperture.org/books

9 781597 112796

Sally Mann: The Flesh and The Spirit By John Ravenal

US $55.00 / CDN $76.95 / UK £35.00 9 × 11 ½ in. (22.8 × 29.2 cm) 200 pages; 225 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-162-1 5 5 5 0 0and the Virginia Copublished by Aperture Museum of Fine Arts

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Monographs and Artist Books

Sally Mann: Immediate Family Afterword by Reynolds Price

US $50.00 / CDN $69.95 / UK £40.00 11 × 9 ½ in. (27.9 × 24.1 cm) 88 pages; 60 images 5 5 and 0 0 0 bellyband Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-254-3

Sally Mann: Proud Flesh Introductory essay by C. D. Wright US $80.00 / CDN $110.95 / UK £50.00 12 × 14 in. (30.5 × 35.6 cm) 64 pages; 33 images Clothbound with tip-on ISBN 978-1-59711-135-5 1 3 0 0 0and Copublished by Aperture Gagosian Gallery

Sally Mann: Still Time US $29.95 / CDN $41.95 / UK £20.00 11 ¼ × 9 ½ in. (28.6 × 24.1 cm) 80 pages; 60 images 52995 Paperback ISBN 978-0-89381-593-6

9 780893 815936

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Mary Ellen Mark Tiny: Streetwise Revisited Essays by Isabel Allende and John Irving US $50.00 / CDN $69.95 / UK £35.00 10 × 12 in. (25.4 × 30.48 cm) 176 pages; 145 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-262-8 Limited-edition print available 55000

9 781597 111355

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Twins Photographs and interviews by Mary Ellen Mark US $50.00 / CDN $69.95 / UK £35.00 10 ½ × 13 in. (26.7 × 33 cm) 96 pages; 80 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-93178-819-9 5000 Limited-edition print5 available

Diana Markosian: Santa Barbara Photographs and text by Diana Markosian Essay by Lynda Myles US $65.00 / CDN $88.00 / UK £50.00 8 ½ × 11 in. (21.6 × 27.9 cm) 216 pages; 116 images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-472-1 Limited-edition portfolio available

Don McCullin Essay by Susan Sontag US $75.00 / CDN $104.95 11 ¼ × 12 in. (30 × 29 cm) 352 pages; 300 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-342-7 5 7 5 0 0only Available in US & Canada

Richard Misrach: Border Cantos By Richard Misrach and Guillermo Galindo US $75.00 / CDN $104.95 / UK £50.00 13 ¼ × 10 ¾ in. (33.6 × 27.3 cm) 274 pages plus 3 gatefolds 257 images Hardcover 57500 ISBN 978-1-59711-289-5

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Monographs and Artist Books

Richard Misrach: Destroy This Memory Photographs by Richard Misrach

Richard Misrach: The Mysterious Opacity of Other Beings Photographs by Richard Misrach

Richard Misrach: Petrochemical America By Richard Misrach and Kate Orff

Nicaragua: June 1978–July 1979 Photographs and texts by Susan Meiselas

US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £45.00 15 × 11 ½ in. (38.1 × 29.2 cm) 140 pages; 70 images 56500 Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-163-8

US $80.00 / CDN $110.95 / UK £50.00 17 × 12 ⅞ in. (43.2 × 32.7 cm) 88 pages; 86 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-327-4 5 8available 000 Limited-edition print

US $39.95 / CDN $55.99 / UK £25.00 11 ⅞ × 9 ¼ in. (29.9 × 23.5 cm) 240 pages; 150 images Paperback with flaps ISBN 978-1-59711-277-2 53995 Limited-edition print available

US $50.00 / CDN $69.95 / UK £35.00 10 ¾ × 8 ½ in. (27.3 × 21.6 cm) 128 pages; 75 images Hardcover with jacket AR function connects to videoclips by Meiselas 55000 ISBN 978-1-59711-383-0

9 781597 111638 9 781597 112772

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101 Tragedies of Enrique Metinides Edited and with an introduction by Trisha Ziff US $50.00 / CDN $69.95 / UK £35.00 8 ½ × 10 ⅜ in. (21.6 × 26.4 cm) 184 pages; 150 images Hardcover with fold-out jacket 55000 ISBN 978-1-59711-211-6

Joel Meyerowitz: Cape Light Interview by Dr. Bruce K. MacDonald US $50.00 / CDN $67.00 / UK £40.00 11 ½ × 9 ¾ in. (26.7 × 22.9 cm) 112 pages; 40 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-339-7 5 4available 500 Limited-edition print

Joel Meyerowitz: Provincetown Photographs and texts by Joel Meyerowitz US $75.00 / CDN $100.00 / UK £60.00 10 ⅝ × 12 ⅝ in. (27 × 32 cm) 160 pages; 103 images Clothbound with tip-on ISBN 978-1-59711-467-7

Lisette Model Preface by Berenice Abbott US $50.00 / CDN $69.95 / UK £27.50 12 × 15 in. (30.5 × 28.1 cm) 112 pages; 54 images 55500 Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-049-5

9 781597 110495

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Monographs and Artist Books

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Monographs and Artist Books

James Mollison: Playground Foreword by Jon Ronson US $50.00 / CDN $69.95 / UK £30.00 9  × 11  in. (24 × 32 cm) 136 pages; 59 images Hardcover, Swiss-bound ISBN 978-1-59711-307-6 5 5available 000 Limited-edition print

9 781597 113076

Zanele Muholi: Somnyama Ngonyama, Hail the Dark Lioness Interview and essay by Renée Mussai With contributions by M. Neelika Jayawardane, Deborah Willis, and more US $85.00 / CDN $110.00 / UK £65.00 10 ½ × 14 in. (26.5 × 35.5 cm) 212 pages; 100 images Hardcover

ISBN 978-1-59711-424-0 Limited edition available

Erwin Olaf: I Am Essays by Mattie Boom, Francis Hodgson, and W. M. Hunt US $75.00 / CDN $100.00 / UK £55.00 9 × 11 ½ in. (22.9 × 29.2 cm) 400 pages; 256 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-466-0 Limited-edition print available

Perfect Strangers: New York City Street Photographs Photographs by Melissa O’Shaughnessy Introduction by Joel Meyerowitz US $50.00 / CDN $65.00 / UK £35.00 11 ½ × 9 ¾ in. (29.2 × 25 cm) 144 pages; 91 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-475-2

A Wild Life: A Visual Biography of Photographer Michael Nichols By Melissa Harris US $35.00 / CDN $47.95 / UK £25.00 7 ½ × 10 in. (19.1 × 25.4 cm) 384 pages; 218 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-251-2 Limited-edition print available

9 781597 112512

Tod Papageorge: American Sports, 1970 or, How We Spent the War in Vietnam Essay by Tim Davis US $50.00 / CDN $69.95 / UK £27.50 11 ¾ × 10 in. (29.8 × 25.4 cm) 128 pages; 75 images 55000 Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-050-1

Earth to Sky: Among Africa’s Elephants, a Species in Crisis Photographs and text by Michael Nichols US $49.95 / CDN $69.95 / UK £29.95 11 ¾ × 8 ⅜ in. (29.8 × 21.7 cm) 192 pages plus 2 gatefolds; 215 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-243-7

9 781597 112512

The Martin Parr Coloring Book! Photographs by Martin Parr Illustrations by Jane Mount US $15.95 / CDN $21.50 / UK £12.95 9 × 11 ½ in. (23 × 29.2 cm) 80 pages; 48 illustrations plus set of stickers Paperback with flaps

ISBN 978-1-59711-425-7

9 781597 110501

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Monographs and Artist Books

Life’s a Beach Photographs by Martin Parr US $25.00 / CDN $34.95 / UK £16.95 8 ¼ × 6 in. (30 × 15.25 cm) 124 pages; 100 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-213-0 52500 Limited edition available

The Non-Conformists Photographs by Martin Parr Texts by Susie Parr US $45.00 / CDN $62.95 / UK £30.00 8 × 9 ⅜ in. (20.3 × 23.8 cm) 168 pages; 120 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-245-1 5 4available 500 Limited-edition print

Rescue Me: Dog Adoption Portraits and Stories from New York City Photographs by Richard Phibbs Texts by Richard Jonas US $15.95 / CDN $22.95 / UK £10.95 6 × 9 in. (15.7 × 23 cm) 112 pages; 73 images Hardcover 51595 ISBN 978-1-59711-338-0

9 781597 112451

US $125.00 / CDN $175.00 / UK £75.00 11 ⅜ × 12 ⅝ in. (28.9 × 32.1 cm) 336 pages; 330 images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-276-5 Limited-edition print available Copublished by Aperture and Fundación 12500 Televisa

US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £45.00 12 ½ × 10 ½ in. (30.5 × 24.7 cm) 128 pages; 75 images Clothbound with tip-on ISBN 978-1-59711-237-6 56500 Limited-edition print available

9 781597 112376

9 781597 112130

¡Vámanos! Bernard Plossu in México Edited by Salvador Albiñana and Juan García de Oteyza

Matthew Pillsbury: City Stages Essay by Mark Kingwell

9 781597 113380

Matthew Porter: The Heights Essay by Rachel Kushner US $50.00 / CDN $65.00 / UK £40.00 10 ¾ × 12 in. (27.3 × 30.5 cm) 56 pages; 25 images Paperback with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-457-8 Limited edition available

Manhattan Sunday Photographs and text by Richard Renaldi US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £45.00 11 × 12 ⅞ in. (27.9 × 32.7 cm) 184 pages plus gatefold; 136 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-376-2 5 6available 500 Limited-edition print

9 781597 113762

Richard Renaldi: Touching Strangers Introduction by Teju Cole US $25.00/ CDN $35.00 / UK £18.95 9 × 11 ½ in. (22.9 × 29.2 cm)

128 pages; 71 images Paperback with flaps ISBN 978-1-59711-430-1

9 781597 112765

Monographs and Artist Books

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Monographs and Artist Books

Sebastião Salgado: Other Americas Texts by Claude Nori, Gonzalo Torrente Ballester, and Alan Riding US $50.00 / CDN $67.00 / UK £40.00 9 ½ × 12 ¼ in. (24.1 × 31.1 cm) 127 pages; 49 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-336-6 54500

Workers: An Archaeology of an Industrial Age Photographs and texts by Sebastião Salgado

Kathy Ryan: Office Romance, Photographs from Inside the New York Times Building Introduction by Renzo Piano

US $100.00 / CDN $140.00 / UK £80.00 9 ¾ × 13 in. (24.8 × 33 cm) 400 pages plus 8 gatefolds and booklet 350 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-0-89381-525-7 Limited-edition print available

US $29.95 / CDN $41.95 / UK £19.95 5 ⅜ × 8 in. (13.7 × 20.3 cm) 160 pages; 132 images Hardcover with jacket 52995 ISBN 978-1-59711-304-5

9 781597 113366

Paul Strand in Mexico Text by James Krippner US $75.00 / CDN $104.95 / UK £50.00 11 ⅜ × 12 ⅞ in. (28.9 × 32.7 cm) 356 pages; 435 images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-137-9 57500 Limited-edition print available

9 781597 111379

9 781597 113045

Paul Strand: The Garden at Orgeval Selection and essay by Joel Meyerowitz US $45.00 / CDN $62.95 / UK £30.00 8 × 10 ⅜ in. (20.3 × 26.4 cm) 96 pages; 45 images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-124-9 54500 Limited-edition print available

9 781597 111249

Tir a’Mhurain: The Outer Hebrides of Scotland Photographs by Paul Strand Texts by Catherine Duncan and Basil Davidson

Paul Mpagi Sepuya By Wassan Al-Khudhairi Contributions by Malik Gaines, Lucy Gallun, Ariel Goldberg, Evan Moffitt, and Grace Wales Bonner

Stephen Shore: Selected Works, 1973–1981 Image selections and texts by Wes Anderson, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Taryn Simon, Lynne Tillman, and more

US $40.00 / CDN $55.95 / UK £25.00 9 ½ × 11 ¼ in. (24.13 × 28.57 cm) 128 pages; 88 images Hardcover with jacket 54000 ISBN 978-0-89381-993-4 Limited-edition print available

US $35.00 / CDN $47.00 / UK £30.00 8 × 10 in. (20.3 × 25.4 cm) 96 pages; 77 images Paperback ISBN 978-1-59711-480-6 Copublished by Aperture and the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis

US $80.00 / CDN $108.00 / UK £60.00 12 × 15 in. (30.5 × 38.1 cm) 280 pages; 145 images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-388-5 Limited edition available

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Monographs and Artist Books

Stephen Shore: Survey Interview by David Campany US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £40.00 11 ¾ × 9 ½ in. (30 × 24 cm) 300 pages; 250 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-309-0 Copublished by Aperture and Fundación 56500 MAPFRE

9 781597 113090

Uncommon Places: Alessandra Sanguinetti: The Complete Works Le Gendarme sur la Colline Photographs and texts by Stephen Shore Essay by Susan Bright Conversation with Lynne Tillman US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 12 ⅞ × 10 ¼ in. (32.76 × 25.9 cm) 208 pages; 176 images Hardcover with jacket 56500 ISBN 978-1-59711-303-8 Available in US & Canada only

US $50.00 / CDN $67.50 / UK £40.00 11 × 10 ¼ in. (28 × 26 cm) 112 pages plus 2 gatefolds; 66 images Flexibind with velvet case ISBN 978-1-59711-426-4

Limited-edition print available Copublished by Aperture and Fondation d’entreprise Hermès

US $80.00 / CDN $108.00 / UK £60.00 11 × 14 ¼ in. (27.9 × 36 cm) 232 pages plus 6 gatefolds; 121 images Clothbound with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-374-8

9 781597 113748

Monographs and Artist Books

US $45.00 / CDN $60.95 / UK £35.00 8 ½ × 10 ¾ in. (21.6 × 27 cm) 136 pages; 149 images Clothbound (imitation leather) ISBN 978-1-59711-385-4

9 781597 113038

Thomas R. Schiff: The Library Book Text by Alberto Manguel

Fantasy Life: Baseball and the American Dream Photographs and text by Tabitha Soren Five linked short stories by Dave Eggers

Robin Schwartz: Amelia and the Animals Texts by Amelia Paul Forman and Donna Gustafson US $39.95 / CDN $55.95 / UK £25.00 8 ½ × 10 ¾ in. (21.6 × 27.3 cm) 144 pages; 75 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-278-9 53995 Limited-edition print available

Ming Smith: An Aperture Monograph Contributions by Emmanuel Iduma, Arthur Jafa, M. Neelika Jayawardane, Yxta Maya Murray, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Namwali Serpell, Janet Hill Talbert, and Greg Tate US $65.00 / CDN $88.00 / UK £50.00 9  × 11 ⅔ in. (25 × 29.6 cm) 236 pages; 110 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-482-0 Copublished by Aperture and Documentary Arts

9 781597 112789

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9 781597 113854

Hiroshi Sugimoto: Black Box Text and interview by Philip Larratt-Smith US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £40.00 11 × 11 in. (28 × 28 cm) 203 pages; 47 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-359-5 Copublished by Aperture 5 6 5 0 0and Fundación MAPFRE

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Monographs and Artist Books

Muse: Photographs by Mickalene Thomas Essay by Jennifer Blessing US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £40.00 10 × 13 in. (25.4 × 33 cm) 156 pages; 85 images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-314-4 ISBN 978-0-89381-314-4 5 6available 500 Limited-edition print

Hank Willis Thomas: All Things Being Equal Texts by Julia Dolan, Sara Krajewski, and Sarah Elizabeth Lewis

Shomei Tomatsu: Chewing Gum and Chocolate Edited by Leo Rubinfien and John Junkerman

US $65.00 / CDN $88.00 / UK £50.00 9 ½ × 11 ½ in. (24.1 × 29.2 cm) 268 pages; 265 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-448-6 Limited edition available Copublished by Aperture and the Portland Art Museum, Oregon

US $80.00 / CDN $110.95 / UK £50.00 10 × 12 in. (25.4 × 30.5 cm) 216 pages; 125 images Clothbound 58000 ISBN 978-1-59711-250-5

9 781597 113144

Alex Webb: Istanbul, City of a Hundred Names Essay by Orhan Pamuk US $50.00 / CDN $69.95 / UK £40.00 11 ¾ × 10 ⅝ in. (29.8 × 24.9 cm) 136 pages; 77 images

Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-034-1

Alex Webb and Rebecca Norris Webb: Brooklyn, The City Within Interview by Sean Corcoran US $50.00 / CDN $65.00 / UK £40.00 8 × 11 in. (22.4 × 29 cm) 208 pages; 85 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-456-1

9 781597 112505

Alex Webb: La Calle, Photographs from Mexico Texts by Guillermo Arriaga, Álvaro Enrigue, Valeria Luiselli, and more US $60.00 / CDN $83.95 / UK £40.00 8 ½ × 10 ⅝ in. (27 × 21.5 cm) 168 pages; 86 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-371-7

Alex Webb: The Suffering of Light Essay by Geoff Dyer US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 13 × 12 in. (33 × 30.5 cm) 204 pages; 115 images Clothbound ISBN 978-1-59711-173-7 56500 Available in US & Canada only

56000

Brian Ulrich: Is This Place Great or What Essay by Juliet B. Schor US $50.00 / CDN $69.95 / UK £32.50 9 ¾ × 11 ¼ in. (28.6 × 24.8 cm) 144 pages; 95 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-192-8 5 5 0 0 0 Limited-edition print available

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Monographs and Artist Books

Penelope Umbrico: Photographs US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £40.00 9 ½ × 10 ¾ in. (24.1 × 27.3 cm) 172 pages; 100 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-171-3 56500 Limited-edition print available

9 781597 111713

James Welling: Monograph Edited and introduced by James Crump US $80.00 / CDN $110.95 / UK £50.00 9 ½ × 11 ½ in. (24.1 × 29.2 cm) 256 pages; 250 images Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-209-3 5 8available 000 Limited-edition print

The Years Shall Run Like Rabbits Photographs by Hellen van Meene US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £40.00 8 ¾ × 11 in. (22.2 × 27.9 cm) 256 pages; 186 images Hardcover with jacket 56500 ISBN 978-1-59711-317-5 Limited-edition print available

Paolo Ventura: Short Stories US $65.00 / CDN $89.95 / UK £45.00 8 ⅜ × 11 ⅝ in. (21 × 29.5 cm) 160 pages; 75 images Hardcover ISBN 978-1-59711-372-4 5 6available 500 Limited-edition print

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Edward Weston: The Flame of Recognition Edited and with a foreword by Nancy Newhall US $45.00 / CDN $62.95 / UK £29.95 8 ¼ × 9 ¾ in. (20.9 × 24.76 cm) 112 pages; 64 images 54500 Hardcover with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-310-6

David Wojnarowicz: Brushfires in the Social Landscape Texts by Vince Aletti, Cynthia Carr, Nan Goldin, Gary Schneider, Kiki Smith, and more US $39.95 / CDN $55.00 / UK £32.95 7 ¼ × 9 ¼ in. (18.3 × 23.4 cm) 240 pages; 130 images Hardcover 55500 ISBN 978-1-59711-294-9

Paolo Ventura: Winter Stories Essay by Eugenia Parry US $85.00 / CDN $120.00 / UK £50.00 11 ½ × 14 in. (29 × 35.5 cm) 120 pages; 65 images Clothbound with jacket ISBN 978-1-59711-125-6 58500 Limited-edition print available

9 781597 111256

Silent Exodus: Portraits of Iraqi Refugees in Exile Photographs by Zalmaï Introduction by Khaled Hosseini US $25.00 / CDN $34.95 / UK £12.95 6 ¼ × 7 ⅞ in. (15.9 × 20 cm) 96 pages; 55 images Paperback 55500 ISBN 978-1-59711-077-8

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Monographs and Artist Books

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Essay Books

Along Some Rivers: Photographs and Conversations By Robert Adams

Beauty in Photography: Essays in Defense of Traditional Values By Robert Adams

US $24.95 / CDN $34.95 / UK £13.95 5 ½ × 8 ¼ in. (14 × 21 cm) 112 pages; 28 images Hardcover with jacket 52495 ISBN 978-1-59711-004-4

US $16.95 / CDN $23.95 / UK £12.95 5 ½ × 8 ¼ in. (14 × 21 cm) 112 pages; 23 images 51695 Paperback ISBN 978-0-89381-368-0

Why People Photograph Essays and reviews by Robert Adams US $16.95 / CDN $23.95 / UK £12.95 5 ½ × 8 ¼ in. (14 × 21 cm) 190 pages; 29 images 51695 Paperback ISBN 978-0-89381-603-2

Aperture Conversations: 1985 to the Present With more than seventy interviews US $35.00 / CDN $45.00 / UK £25.00 6  × 9 ½ in. (16.8 × 24.3 cm) 560 pages Flexibind

ISBN 978-1-59711-306-9

9 780893 816032 9 78 1 59 7 1 1 00 4 4

The Pleasures of Good Photographs Essays by Gerry Badger US $29.95 / CDN $41.95 / UK £16.95 6 × 8 ½ in. (15.2 × 21.6 cm) 256 pages; 36 images Flexibind ISBN 978-1-59711-139-3 2995 Also available as an 5e-book

9 781597 111393

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John Berger: Understanding a Photograph Edited and introduced by Geoff Dyer US $24.95 / CDN $34.95 6 × 8 ½ in. (15.2 × 21.6 cm) 176 pages; 27 images Clothbound with tip-on ISBN 978-1-59711-256-7 52495 Available in US & Canada only

Henri Cartier-Bresson: Interviews and Conversations, 1951–1998 Edited and with a foreword by Clément Chéroux and Julie Jones US $19.95 / CDN $26.95 / UK £15.00 4 ¾ × 7 ¼ in. (12 × 18.4 cm) 160 pages Paperback with flaps ISBN 978-1-59711-392-2

US $19.95 / CDN $27.95 / UK £14.95 5 ⅜ × 8 ¼ in. (13.67 × 21 cm) 112 pages; 16 images Hardcover with jacket 51995 ISBN 978-0-89381-875-3

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The Mind’s Eye: Writings on Photography and Photographers By Henri Cartier-Bresson


Essay Books

Public, Private, Secret: On Photography and the Configuration of Self By Charlotte Cotton US $29.95 / CDN $38.99 / UK £19.95 7 × 10 in. (17.8 × 25.4 cm) 232 pages; 80 images Paperback with flaps ISBN 978-1-59711-438-7 Copublished by Aperture and the

International Center of Photography

Photography After Frank Essays by Philip Gefter US $29.95 / CDN $41.95 / UK £16.95 6 × 8 ½ in. (15.2 × 21.6 cm) 224 pages; 75 images Flexibind ISBN 978-1-59711-095-2 52995 Also available as an e-book

Light Matters: Writings on Photography Essays by Vicki Goldberg

Crisis of the Real: Writings on Photography Essays by Andy Grundberg

US $19.95 / CDN $27.95 / UK £16.95 5 ½ × 8 ½ in. (14 × 21.6 cm) 248 pages; 27 images 51995 Paperback ISBN 978-1-59711-165-2

US $19.95 / CDN $27.95 / UK £12.95 6 ½ × 9 ¼ in. (16.5 × 23.5 cm) 292 pages; 44 images Paperback 51995 ISBN 978-1-59711-140-9

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Photography Changes Everything Edited by Marvin Heiferman US $39.95 / CDN $55.95 / UK £25.00 7 × 10 in. (17.8 × 25.4 cm) 264 pages; 250 images Paperback with flaps ISBN 978-1-59711-199-7 Copublished by Aperture 5 3 9 9 5and the Smithsonian Institution

Susan Meiselas: On the Frontline Edited with Mark Holborn US $35.00 / CDN $47.00 6 ¾ × 8 ½ in. (17.2 × 21.6 cm) 256 pages; 113 images Clothbound with half jacket

ISBN 978-1-59711-427-1 Available in US & Canada only Limited-edition print available

Bending the Frame: Photojournalism, Documentary, and the Citizen By Fred Ritchin US $19.95 / CDN $27.95 / UK £12.95 8 × 8 ½ in. (15.2 × 21.6 cm) 156 pages; 40 images Paperback with flaps ISBN 978-1-59711-120-1 51995 Also available as an e-book

In Our Own Image Essays by Fred Ritchin US $16.95 / CDN $23.95 / UK £9.95 6 ½ × 9 ¼ in. (16.5 × 23.5 cm) 164 pages; 38 images Paperback 51695 ISBN 978-1-59711-164-5

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Essay Books

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Essay Books

Between the Eyes: Essays on Photography and Politics By David Levi Strauss Introduction by John Berger

Words Not Spent Today Buy Smaller Images Tomorrow: Essays on the Present and Future of Photography By David Levi Strauss

US $19.95 / CDN $27.95 / UK £12.95 6 ½ × 8 ¼ in. (12 × 21 cm) 208 pages; 47 images 51995 Paperback ISBN 978-1-59711-214-7

US $29.95 / CDN $41.95 / UK £18.95 6 × 8 ½ in. (15.2 × 21.6 cm) 192 pages; 35 images Flexibind 52995 ISBN 978-1-59711-271-0

9 781597 112147

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Question Bridge: Black Males in America Edited by Deborah Willis and Natasha L. Logan Texts by Hank Willis Thomas and more US $29.95 / CDN $41.95 / UK £19.95 6 ¾ × 7 ⅞ in. (17.1 × 20 cm) 256 pages; 200 images Paperback ISBN 978-1-59711-335-9 Copublished by Aperture and the 2 9 9 5Achievement Campaign for Black5Male

9 781597 113359

The Lives of Images, Vol. 1: Repetition, Reproduction, and Circulation Edited by Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa Interviews with Paul Pfeiffer and Batia Suter US $24.95 / CDN $32.95 / UK £19.95 4 ³⁄₄ × 7 in. (12.1 × 17.8 cm) 284 pages Paperback ISBN 978-1-59711-502-5

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The Lives of Images, Vol. 2: Analogy, Attunement, and Attention Edited by Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa Interviews with Lucas Blalock and Frida Orupabo US $24.95 / CDN $32.95 / UK £19.95 4 ³⁄₄ × 7 in. (12.1 × 17.8 cm) 328 pages Paperback ISBN 978-1-59711-507-0

The Lives of Images, Vol. 3: Archives, Histories, and Memory Edited by Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa US $24.95 / CDN $32.95 / UK £19.95 4 ³⁄₄ × 7 in. (12.1 × 17.8 cm) 288 pages Paperback ISBN 978-1-59711-512-4


How to Order Richard Gregg Sales Director, Books rgregg@aperture.org Lillian Wilkie Sales Manager, UK & Europe lwilkie@aperture.org Giada De Agostinis Publicist gdeagostinis@aperture.org Kellie McLaughlin Chief Sales and Marketing Officer kmclaughlin@aperture.org Taia Kwinter Publishing Manager tkwinter@aperture.org

Aperture books are distributed in the US and Canada by: Ingram Publisher Services (IPS) Customer Service, Box 631 14 Ingram Blvd La Vergne, TN 37086 T +1 844.841.0255 ips@ingramcontent.com ipage.ingrambook.com As of January 1, 2022, Aperture books will be distributed in the UK, Europe (not including France) and the rest of world by: Ingram Publisher Services International 5th Floor 52–54 St John Street London EC1M 4HF United Kingdom T +44 1752 202301 ips_intlsales@ingramcontent.com And in France by: Interart S.A.R.L. 1 rue de l'Est 75020 Paris, France T +33 1 43 49 36 60 info@interart.fr

Aperture magazine is available for bookstores, galleries, and other retailers in the US and Canada from: Ingram Publisher Services +1 844.841.0255 ips@ingramcontent.com As of January 1, 2022, Aperture magazine will be distributed in the UK, Europe (not including France) and the rest of world by: Ingram Publisher Services International T +44 1752 202301 ips_intlsales@ingramcontent.com Aperture magazine is distributed on newsstands in the US and Canada by: TNG, T +1 866.466.7231, cservice@tng.com And in the rest of the world by: Central Books, centralbooks.com For individual orders of Aperture titles and to subscribe to Aperture magazine, visit aperture.org

Aperture Foundation 548 West 28th Street, 4th Floor New York, NY 10001 T +1 212.946.7154 orders@aperture.org Aperture, a not-for-profit foundation, connects the photo community and its audiences with the most inspiring work, the sharpest ideas, and with each other—in print, in person, and online. aperture.org/books

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Aperture Foundation 548 West 28th Street, 4th Floor New York, NY 10001 T +1 212.946.7154 orders@aperture.org

ISBN 978-1-59711-529-2


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