Sergey Bykov – After Us
PhotoBook Journal
by Gerhard Clausing
1w ago
Review by Hans Hickerson • Part of the fun of reviewing photobooks is getting under the hood and taking a book apart to see what makes it work. Sergey Bykov’s photobook After Us is a good candidate for a closer look, as it resists easy analysis. Or rather there is an obvious reading but then ..read more
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Interviews with Polycopies Organizers Sebastian Hau, Sara Giuliattini, and Laurent Chardon
PhotoBook Journal
by Gerhard Clausing
1w ago
By Hans Hickerson • [Editor’s Note: These interviews are an interesting look at the history and wherewithal of this event, and accompany the report and visual essay we published a few days ago.] Paris, November 10, 2024 Sebastian Hau Hans Hickerson:  So, can you tell a little bit about the history of Polycopies and how ..read more
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Polycopies 2024 (Paris)
PhotoBook Journal
by Gerhard Clausing
1w ago
Report and Visual Essay by Hans Hickerson • Polycopies started as a small popup photobook sales event with a few vendors in 2014. It has grown and today includes prizes, speakers, workshops, and focused programs. It was on a refreshingly more human scale than Paris Photo, but at peak hours it too could become a mosh ..read more
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Paris Photo 2024
PhotoBook Journal
by Gerhard Clausing
1w ago
Report and Visual Essay by Hans Hickerson • Never having attended Paris Photo, I did not know what to expect.  I was unprepared for its overwhelming scale, its high-octane mix of image and ego. And the crowds: how at times you had to wait to squeeze in to look at a book, or to queue ..read more
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Pryor Dodge – YLLA: The Birth of Modern Animal Photography
PhotoBook Journal
by Gerhard Clausing
1M ago
Review by Gerhard Clausing • All you have to do is watch “Gorilla Videos” on Facebook to recognize that some animals are very similar to us. And that is not really a case of anthropomorphism, which can be defined as attributing human characteristics to other creatures. But assigning animals to a lower class and denying ..read more
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Frank Rodick – The Moons of Saturn
PhotoBook Journal
by Douglas Stockdale
1M ago
Review by Steve Harp · Frank Rodick’s monograph, The Moons of Saturn, has been sitting before me on my desk for quite some time (I will not embarrass myself by revealing just how long) – a testament to its unsettling yet spellbinding mystery.  In looking through it, I am reminded of W.G. Sebald’s novel, The Emigrants, the sense of disintegration in these images ..read more
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Holly Roussell, Editor – Mo Yi: Selected Photographs 1988-2003
PhotoBook Journal
by Gerhard Clausing
1M ago
Review by Gerhard Clausing • Mo Yi is an interesting Chinese photographer of Tibetan origin. He has had only a few major exhibitions in the West; this photobook and the related exhibitions (UCCA Center for Contemporary Art and Arles Photography Festival) are a welcome change. His work encompasses several decades of experimenting with images of ..read more
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Lynn Alleva Lilley – The Nest
PhotoBook Journal
by Douglas Stockdale
2M ago
Review by Hans Hickerson · Lynn Alleva Lilley’s photobook The Nest rewards careful as well as casual looking. A finely observed and lovingly chronicled portrait of the woods near her home in Silver Spring, Maryland, in 98 photographs it builds up overlapping layers of detail, form, relationship, and metaphorical resonance. Like the photographs of other artists who ..read more
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Michael Rababy – Casinoland: Tired of Winning
PhotoBook Journal
by Gerhard Clausing
2M ago
Review by Melanie Chapman • If Toulouse-Lautrec and Martin Parr had a baby, its name would be Casinoland: Tired of Winning. A dynamic collection of new color photographs by Michael Rababy, this publication from Kehrer Verlag focuses our gaze on the denizens of casinos in Las Vegas, Reno, and other illustrious locales, and offers such ..read more
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Bethany Eden Jacobson – Ode To A Cemetery
PhotoBook Journal
by Douglas Stockdale
3M ago
Review by Brian Rose · During the 2020 pandemic, Bethany Jacobson escaped the confines of her apartment and took to the winding paths of Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn. For those of us in New York, the whoops and wails of sirens seemed never to cease, a constant reminder of the presence of disease and death in ..read more
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