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Type Archive: Book Review
Book Review: Beautiful, Still. by Colby Deal
Third Ward is one of 4 wards that originally made up the city of Houston, Texas, in the 1800s. Historically, whites lived in the southern part of the Third Ward, while African Americans were economically segregated and lived north of the Third Ward. In the 1930s, the black and white populations of the Third Ward
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Location: Online Type: Black and White, Book Review, Portraits
Book Review: Dessert First! by Hanna Quevedo
Dessert First! has been the example I’ve been comparing against other photography books and zines for the past year. This project was a reminder of how fun it can be to make something with photographs, found art, text, ephemera, and a stretchy band or two to keep all that goodness inside. Like a live
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Location: Online Type: Book Review, Zine
Book Review: Golden Apple of the Sun by Teju Cole
Golden Apple of the Sun by Teju Cole is a visual exploration of the artist’s personal and cultural identity, as well as a reflection on the relationship between photography and memory. Along with his photographs is an essay, which addresses hunger, fasting, mourning, slavery, intimacy, painting, poetry and the history of photography. I admit that
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Location: Online Type: Book Review
Book Review: Invited to Life by B.A. Van Sise
“No matter how it might seem, this is not a book about the Holocaust. This is a story of overcoming.” Invited to Life contains 90 portraits, each with accompanying text by and/or about the person featured on the page, each of whom are Holocaust survivors. Three essays are included from contributors Dr. Mayim Bialik,
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Location: Online Type: Black and White, Book Review, Portraits
Book Review: Little Cities by Rich-Joseph Facun
In his second monograph, Little Cities, Rich-Joseph Facun guides viewers on a meandering meditation through Southeastern Ohio by depicting the vernacular post-industrial landscape. In their quiet formality, the images call to mind past dreams, and prompt us to look beyond what can be seen on the surface. Facun’s work explores some of the remaining signs
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Location: Online Type: Book Review
Book Review: The Sniper Paused So He Could Wipe His Brow by Sean Lotman
Sean Lotman’s book, The Sniper Paused So He Could Wipe His Brow is a fantastic journey of images, with brief, whisper-like lines of poetry paced throughout a noticeably non-standard binding format (a tall thin book on the shelf). When the book is opened, it forms a square shape – much like Lotman’s images on the
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Location: Online Type: Book Review
Book Review: East of Nowhere by Fabio Ponzio
During these last months, because of the war in Ukraine and its horrors, I have thought a lot about wars, about the weak. I think of the losers. I think of the east as a geographical place and, above all, as an idea. An idea that has always belonged to me. The East has always
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Location: Online Type: Book Review
Book Review: EDGE by David Ricci
David Ricci is fascinated by the role that randomness and chance plays in our lives. There is an underlying rhythmic pulse in the universe which, at particular places and times, is manifested visually in spaces where order and chaos reach a taut balance. He looks for those scenes where a complex image, teetering at the
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Location: Online Type: Book Review
Book Review: Tickety-Boo by Charles H. Traub
One of the things many people admire and appreciate about Charles H. Traub‘s work is this: one can look at an image of his which immediately conjures, say, the work of Botticelli, or Michelangelo, or Diane Arbus or Robert Frank’s (and others who reside in the collective mind’s-eye of the world). And at the
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Location: Online Type: Book Review
Book Review: It’s Been Pouring: The Dark Secret of the First Year of Motherhood by Rachel Papo
Rachel Papo’s book, It’s Been Pouring, is brave. Her words and images explore postpartum depression and expose the often dark and widely misunderstood period of time many mothers inhabit – a period of time fraught with contradictions. “You should be so happy!” (they say), but exhaustion wracks your body and mind. Papo’s experience and this
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Location: Online Type: Book Review
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