Note: This is a publication part of the New Irish Works series. Eanna de Freine’s already published book is available here. Tales from Beneath the Arches project is a visual exploration...
The essence of Joshua Amirthasingh’s work lies in the stories it unfolds. Fueled by a deep sense of nostalgia for the vibrant energy of his childhood in India and his...
‘Talking about Photobooks’ gives an insight in the history of the photobook medium, its relationship to architecture and artificial intelligence, and the many roles the photobook can play in art...
Tangier Island is home to the Chesapeake Bay’s isolated community of “watermen,” who have lived off crab fishing since the mid-nineteenth century. The island is sinking and shrinking at an...
A zine dedicated to a screen icon. She's the Madam Butterfly of San Francisco! She's a tousled Monica Vitti on a vespa! She's eating a macaroon in D&G! The gays...
Please note: we only post unframed prints. For framed purchases, free Click-and-Collect is available from The Library Project, and Dublin delivery only. See further shipping information below. Cosmos2023Inkjet25 x 25...
Please note: we only post unframed prints. For framed purchases, free Click-and-Collect is available from The Library Project, and Dublin delivery only. See further shipping information below. Flux2025Inkjet32 x 44...
Please note: we only post unframed prints. For framed purchases, free Click-and-Collect is available from The Library Project, and Dublin delivery only. See further shipping information below. I Will Be...
Please note: we only post unframed prints. For framed purchases, free Click-and-Collect is available from The Library Project, and Dublin delivery only. See further shipping information below. In Bloom2025Risography25.5 x...
Please note: we only post unframed prints. For framed purchases, free Click-and-Collect is available from The Library Project, and Dublin delivery only. See further shipping information below. Patchwork2025RisographyEdition of 1020...
Please note: we only post unframed prints. For framed purchases, free Click-and-Collect is available from The Library Project, and Dublin delivery only. See further shipping information below. Something is Watching2023Inkjet25...
Please note: we only post unframed prints. For framed purchases, free Click-and-Collect is available from The Library Project, and Dublin delivery only. See further shipping information below. Take A Bite2025Inkjet17...
Please note: we only post unframed prints. For framed purchases, free Click-and-Collect is available from The Library Project, and Dublin delivery only. See further shipping information below. The Kitchen2023Risography32 x...
Taratine is the first US monograph by acclaimed Japanese photographer Daisuke Yokota. Highly regarded for his technical and aesthetic kinships with the avant-garde Mono-ha movement of the ‘60s and with...
Tarraingíonn Scéal Scéal Eile (One Story Leads to Another) is a photobook which aims to visually represent stories of Irish folklore and mythology.It does so in a lyrical and engaging...
The expression “speak out” in Chinese is fā shēng, which literally means “to produce sound”. It often has a vital social component, but at the same time emphasises an immediate choice...
Teasing Typography by graphic designer Juliane Nöst is a book that, with its logical structure and rebellious results, opens up new views of the world of boundary-pushing typography. How does...
Portraits of individual teenagers photographed in Europe and the UK, set within a rainy atmosphere.
Published by Unpatient BooksSoftcover60 pages240 x 180 mmISBN 9780993149795
Abigail O’Brien’s Temperance is a cauldron of brimful of complexities, contradictions and dualities set in the context of an iconic Donegal sweet factory. This photobook was created after the artist...
Lauren Noelle Oliver (b. 1992, Queens) is a New York City-based artist exploring form and the human body. She attended the High School of Fashion Industries in Manhattan and holds...
Ten Exhibits presents a body of work dealing with the relationship between language, image and location using the lingo of forensic photography. The project consists of evidence collected at exhibition...
Juri Velt explores potential scenarios emerging with the disappearance of a segment of society in a mountain town. Three tales unfold in the voids left by its departure, unravelling the...
"Words are not inherently suitable to embrace any even blurred concept of time, and beside all speech being made nowadays around the sense of family, its true nature belongs to...
Terra is a personal exploration of the image culture of 'Ireland's largest motor and classifieds website' DoneDeal.ie. As the author becomes engrossed by found imagery of cars, farm machinery, animals...
The sixth issue of Terrible People presents a special focus on the cacophony that life can be. What would this world be without the sweet sounds of music? More and more...
Culture, Society, Money & ShitThe seventh issue presents a brand new design and takes a deep dive into the chaos of cash and capital. Because we couldn’t help but wonder:...
If you’ve ever wondered why people do stupid things, you’re not alone. Terrible People magazine explores the ‘dark side’ of human nature through essays, illustration and photography. Terrible People's fifth...
Tessie is a photobook inspired by the personal stories of a woman who was 102 years old. Page by page, portrait by portrait, one is drawn into a biographical collage...
Shaken by her mother’s illness, Charlotte Mano has initiated a photographic series staging their daily life into micro-fictions. A response to transform these moments together and celebrate their complicity when...
Printed in a a premium off-white shade uncoated paper and board with a laid finish.Published by PhotoIrelandIncludes blank white envelopeA6300 gsm paper.
A decade of rapid change caught by two of Ireland's premier photographers, The Lensmen. The 1960s: Ireland in Pictures covers everything from the visits of President Kennedy and The Beatles, to...
The 1Shanthiroad Cookbook brings together a collection of recipes from the community kitchen of 1Shanthiroad Studio/Gallery, compiled and edited by the space's founding director, Suresh Jayaram. Featuring recipes from over...
Published in 2021 on the occasion of LAXART’s 'The Absolute Right to Exclude: Reflections on and Implications of Cheryl Harris’ “Whiteness as Property”', a Cassandra Press exhibition. Cassandra Press was...
The series “The Abyss” captures more than mere landscapes; it encapsulates a profound narrative of our contemporary era, marked by turmoil, isolation, and introspection. Each image, devoid of colour yet...
An unprecedented visual history of African women told in striking and subversive historical photographs – featuring an Introduction by Edwidge Danticat and a Foreword by Jacqueline Woodson. Most of us...
In 1964, a Zambian science teacher named Edwuard Makuka decided to train the first African crew to travel to the moon. His plan was to use an aluminium rocket to put...
The Air from Other Planets introduces an architecture built and controlled by amplifying and designing the energy within our electromagnetic, thermodynamic, acoustic, and chemical environment. This approach to design exchanges...
The white cubical house, the vernacular architecture in the Aegean Archipelago, knows no author. Its capacity to resist harsh climatic and topographic circumstances has been improved and adjusted through time...
Christodoulos Makris’ second full collection, blends painstaking poetic craft with the accidental hazards of found text and overheard sample. As challenging as it is accessible, these poems comment wittily yet...
The aftermath of the Covid restrictions, mental problems, being confronted with the influx of people with a different background and culture, the alienation of ourselves and of others, not being...
Joelle McTigue's work considers memory as unstable matter shaped by movement, repetition, access, power, and erasure. "The Archive Dreams Us: Where Light Remembers Wrongly, Seventeen Haiku" gathers passages that trace how...
The Arsenic Eaters investigates the widespread historical belief that the consumption of arsenic, generally known to be a deadly poison, is beneficial to one’s health. Accordingly, many ‘poison eaters’ were...
In just half a century of growth, the art fair industry has transformed the art market. Now, for the first time, art market journalist Melanie Gerlis tells the story of...
‘Simplicity of life is not a misery, but the very foundation of refinement : a sanded floor and whitewashed walls, and the green trees ; or a grimy palace amid the smoke...
Francesca Woodman made her first mature photographs at the age of thirteen and went on to create a body of work that has been critically acclaimed for its singularity of...
First published in 1986, Nan Goldin's The Ballad of Sexual Dependency is a visual diary chronicling the struggles for intimacy and understanding among the friends and lovers whom Goldin describes...
The second book from Coracle of William Minor’s poems, after 'tree on the outside' from 2010. Here, by conjecture and statement surrounding the artist’s life and work, he presents an interior...
Aggressively rebounding after recessions and the pandemic, sprawling landscapes of tourism in the Mediterranean continue to build upon the iconic spatial typology of sea & sun vacationing: the beach. But...
The Beginning The End is a collection of quotes taken from 212 classic and b-fiction books, and involves writing one book with two parts: The Beginning and The End. The...
belvedere: a structure designed to command a view; from the Italian bel "beautiful" and vere "to see" The Belvedere is produced by Dublin City University's M.A. in Creative Writing programme, a class that convenes...
The Big Rot is ZONE's second collective book and it features 46 artists from all around the world. The open call didn’t have a specific theme, but the following text...
-Suitable for ages 10 and up- A colourful and insightful introduction to the lives of the world’s most renowned and inspirational artists. This informative book invites young readers to discover...
To impair the racial ordering of the world, The Black Technical Object introduces the history of statistical analysis and “scientific” racism into research on machine learning. Computer programming designed for...
In 1993 an author buried a golden sculpture— the Chouette d’Or (Golden Owl)—and released a book with eleven allusive clues as to its whereabouts somewhere in France. Nearly 30 years later,...
The Blood and Body is a collection of poetry by multidisciplinary artist Nubia Yasin. Family photos, surreal illustrations, and Yasin’s own unique voice as a self described First Generation Somali-Southern...
Publication accompanying the exhibition The Blue Rooms at the City Assembly House, September 2023.The Blue Rooms is a series of projected images in domestic rooms in houses in Dublin City,...
The Book of Black captures the art and aesthetics of the Gothic in contemporary arts, photography and visual culture. The book celebrates renowned artists such Mat Collishaw, The Chapman Brothers, Tim...
A visceral, surrealist tale of becoming, from the shamanic cult hero of contemporary queer poetry. Beguiling, outrageous, playfully morbid and frequently stunning in its surreal flights of imagination, The Book...
Over the summer of 2021, writer and artist Nathan O'Donnell spent several weeks on the Tipperary shoreline of Lough Derg, exploring its history, ecology, and topography and gathering stories about...
'Amongst the millions of palm trees in Los Angeles there is one that stands out: The Exposition Park Palm Tree. Having been moved three times within its lifetime, the palm...
In a series of evocative vignettes, celebrated Iraqi poet Majed Mujed lyrically traverses the fraught landscapes of beauty, longing and resistance in a country at war. The Book of Trivialities, originally...
18In the work of Erica Van Horn, books collect and transform remnants, remembrances, remainders and reminders. From fragments that might otherwise be forgotten, she makes new inventories and series in...
The Brand Book provides a straightforward and practical guide to the fundamentals of brands and branding, enabling anyone in business to create their own powerful brand. Entertainingly written in jargon-free...
At last the mighty task is done;Resplendent in the western sun These are the first lines of a poem by Joseph B. Strauss, Chief Engineer of the Golden Gate Bridge....
The Bright Plain contains two short stories by Michelle Dooley Mahon; ‘The Deacon’ and ‘The Meadow of Women’, in which ritual devotions are placed in contemporary contexts. She writes of...
Edited from 25 years of work (1979–2005), The British Landscape is a collation of John Davies’ revealing landscapes. Rich in detail and narrative, and contrasting scenes of nature apparently untouched by humans...
Through Stylian Tastsoglou’s photographs, The Cabin captures fleeting, candid moments of people inhabiting a temporarily built structure. Borrowing from the visual language of photobooths, the images transform a familiar format...
This publication was created in response to an ISTD brief about our interpersonal interactions and the importance of communication in our daily lives. The title is a reference to research...
The Canadians playfully and informatively re-imagines one of the most revered photobooks of the 20th century, Robert Frank’s The Americans. The source for the imagery is the print archive of...
In The Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction, visionary author Ursula K. Le Guin tells the story of human origin by redefining technology as a cultural carrier bag rather than a...
Our present is defined by contemporaneity—the interconnection of heterogeneous times, histories, and temporalities. These many and various times do not merely exist in parallel with one another, simultaneously. Rather, they interconnect...
In the Alto Tajo Valley, one of the most depopulated areas in Europe, and dominated by wilderness, one can sense the age-old journey humankind took since the darkness of time....
There is nothing so expressive as the eyes of animals … which seem objectively to mourn that they are not human – Theodor W. Adorno In her afterword, Camilla Flodin...
The Circle: Timeline for a Constellation concludes Bouchra Khalili’s ten-year investigation into the Arab Workers Movement (MTA), focusing on its theatre troupes, Al Assifa (the tempest) and Al Halaka (the circle,...
The City & The City is a photographic exchange between artists Thom Bridge (SE/UK) and Taisuke Koyama (JP), based in the UK and Tokyo respectively. Their collaboration explores the visual...
In this groundbreaking work, Ariella Azoulay thoroughly revises our understanding of the ethical status of photography. It must, she insists, be understood in its inseparability from the many catastrophes of...
Ireland is an island surrounded by ocean, with a high percentage of its population living in the coastal zone and has often been referred to as an “island nation”. The...
Liss Fenwick’s The Colony is a book about books – and what happens when their authority is quietly and actively undone. Set in the distant north of the Australian continent,...
Set against the backdrop of the American West, The Color of Money and Trees explores the connection between self-identity and how society defines success. As we navigate the interplay between...
Challenging Institutionalization explores the heterogeneous processes of PhD and postdoc supervision in the arts to formulate shared horizons. The publication is structured around a series of lectures and conversations that took...
What parallels are there between a human pranayama practitioner and a migratory bird in heavily datafied environments? And what can they tell us about the need to reorient our...
With the demise of Kodachrome film in 2009, the colour palette that in many ways defined an era also disappeared. The 200+ Kodachrome slides selected by Ed Jones and Timothy...
From Brutalist blocks to Modernist towers, this book is a visual celebration of 68 of London’s most iconic council estates, reminding us of the pride, thought and innovation that went...
No one doubts Queen Victoria would have loved Colombia. She was known to suffer from orchid delirium and appointed an official Royal orchid expert whose name was Frederick Sanders. The...
The Cowboy is a short illustrated zine exploring the concept of cowboys and their space in queerness as a stereotypically masculine societal role. A risograph love letter to cowboys and queer masculinity...
Rick Rubin is known for something else: creating a space where artists of all different genres and traditions can home in on who they really are and what they really...
An updated edition of this essential practical handbook for all those involved in, or studying the dynamic field of curating. From pitching your ideas and writing loan requests to working...
In The Curatorial Condition, Beatrice von Bismarck considers the field of activity and knowledge that relates to the exhibiting of art and culture. The curatorial, in her analysis, is a...
Catalina Lozano, born in Bogotá in 1979, is a Colombian curator and independent writer based in Mexico City. Analysing colonial narratives and deconstructing the perceived progress of modernity have forcefully...
In The Curious History of Irish Dogs, David Blake Knox tells the remarkable stories of each of the nine breeds, and reveals how they have become inextricably linked to...
Danielle Mericle’s The Dark Wood explores broad questions of history and our collective ability to document and learn from the past. Through intertwined images of abandoned Greco-Roman casts, an ancient...
The Darkroom is an accordion style, handmade/bound photobook consisting of 19 black and white photographic prints on fine art paper. The photograph's were taken using the Hasselblad 501CM, developed and...
In her essay The Dematerialization of Art, Lucy Lippard presented evidence that art might be entering a phase of pure intellectualism, the result of which could be the complete disappearance...
In 1969, shortly after moving to Detroit, Lorraine and Fredy Perlman and a group of kindred spirits purchased a printing press from a defunct militant printer and the Detroit Printing...
The Print Handbook is a friendly guide for all those tricky bits in design. It's packed full of examples, handy tools, charts and information. It helps you produce perfect print projects. Unlike all...
Michael Scott’s Áras Mhic Dhiarmada and Busáras is one of the most important modernist buildings in Ireland. Built between 1947 and 1953, it was intended to be a bus station...
The Drift///Parallax is a triptych of publications based on the stars Arcturus, Rigel, and Vega. This series uses image and text to consider constructs of masculinity and how they intersect...
With a Foreword by Dermot Bannon and an introductory essay by the architect Jonathan Sergison, The Dublin Architecture Guide is a companion guide to the modern architecture of Dublin. With...
Studio Publication Series is a collection of zine-like booklets that invites TBG+S Studio Artists to present and publish research materials and experimental imagery. The sketchbook-like approach draws together thoughts, ideas and...
The Early Bird Catches the Worm is a hand-bound risograph zine by An Gee Chan, a fine artist from Royal College of Art / Fine Art Printmaking. Chan's unique, simplistic illustration style is...
In 1924, the Philadelphia architect Horace Trumbauer was commissioned by tobacco millionaire and plantation owner, James Buchanan Duke, to develop and expand the existing Trinity College campus of Duke University...
Bruce Gilden’s new book is a raw, unflinching portrait of England seen through the eyes of one of street photography’s most daring practitioners. From Liverpool’s football terraces to the troubled...
For over 25 years, Hido has crafted narratives through loose and mysterious suburban scenes, desolate landscapes, and cinematic portraits. Irrespective of its title, this is a book about hope and...
"Deep inside the interior world of Tereza Zelenkova’s The Essential Solitude, time has ceased to exist. Webs of dust have gathered on unmade beds, folds of black velvet sit decaying...
The European Review of Books is a magazine of culture and ideas, in English and in a writer’s own tongue. They publish book-length print issues three times a year, and...
‘The character of the everyday has always been repetitive and veiled by obsession and fear', wrote Henri Lefebvre in 1987. Drawing on his mid-twentieth century Critique of Everyday Life, a monumental...
The Exposed Eye #1 contains 18 assignments, carried out by Helga Härenstam and Anna Strand. The last assignment in the book goes to the reader. The contributions they receive will...
500-piece jigsaw puzzle of Alex Prager’s artwork The Extras (2019), from her body of work Play the Wind . Finished puzzle dimensions: 450 x 450 mmBox dimensions: 245 x 190...
The Eyes questions cultural and societal evolutions through the prism of photography and creation and gives carte blanche to experts directly concerned by the subjects addressed. With this new issue...
The Failed Painter is a personal book about material anxiety in Graphic design’s creative work. It speaks of fascination for singular and multiple production processes, perfectibility, and imperfectability in times...
There among the Fair that is where my soul be called to // Around every horse that gallops free // The noise of a hundred Irish accents floating throughout across...
Black Mountain College (BMC) was a wellspring of 20th-century creative unorthodoxy. From its founding in 1933 and over its 23 year history, the small liberal arts school in rural North...
Do colleagues roll their eyes in a meeting when you use words like sexism or racism? Do you refuse to laugh at jokes that aren't funny? Have you been called...
'The First Draft' is an artistic homecoming, bringing internationally influenced work back to the roots of Rich Gilligan's creative journey and offers a contemplative look at the themes of belonging,...
Pearse House: Village in the City is an extraordinary and unique exhibition by award-winning photographer Jeanette Lowe. In a series of startling photographs she has captured a hidden treasure of...
'This book is about them, about the ones for whom Flight is the essence of things. About the ones for whom Flight, the mastery of maneuvers and diving, the dizzying...
The Flower is a hand printed zine presented as a symbol of life and death for children. Capturing a bright and lively illustrated flower, gradually changing in vibrancy and colour, fading...
The Fog has lifted consists of self portraits and landscapes that are juxtaposed with and diaristic writing that documents Marie Smith’s experience (from 2019 to 2020) with depression and anxiety....
The Fold comprises ten years of practice reshaped according to the principles of book production methods: folding, cutting, and binding. Operating like a making-of, the publication displays its structural mechanisms,...
Through critical reappropriation, Afshar reclaims a colonial photographic legacy fixated on the veiled woman. 'The Fold' is a critical visual and psychological investigation into the enduring legacy of Orientalist and colonialist...
The latest book by photographer Rosalind Fox Solomon begins by meditating upon the differences and regularities that shape the lives of people around the world. In a Brazilian favela, a...
Description: Now it in its third printing, The Form of the Book Book brings together essential essays on the book – its history, present, and possible futures – by preeminent graphic...
Durst scrutinises aspirational American fantasies of happiness, self-improvement and individuality in a provocative critique of social rituals, groups and norms. The Four Pillars grew out of a relationship with a...
As museums shut worldwide in 2020 because of the novel coronavirus, New York-based cultural strategist András Szántó conducted a series of interviews with an international group of museum leaders. In...
'In the tranquil embrace of my garden, where nature quietly reclaimed its space during the stillness of the pandemic, I found a world teeming with unassuming beauty. Through my lens,...
The Gentlewoman celebrates modern women of style and purpose. Its fabulous biannual magazine offers a fresh and intelligent perspective on fashion that’s focused on personal style – the way women...
The Gentlewoman celebrates modern women of style and purpose. Its fabulous biannual magazine offers a fresh and intelligent perspective on fashion that’s focused on personal style – the way women...
The Gentlewoman celebrates modern women of style and purpose. Its fabulous biannual magazine offers a fresh and intelligent perspective on fashion that’s focused on personal style – the way women...
The Gentlewoman celebrates modern women of style and purpose. Its fabulous biannual magazine offers a fresh and intelligent perspective on fashion that’s focused on personal style – the way women...
The Gentlewoman celebrates modern women of style and purpose. Its fabulous biannual magazine offers a fresh and intelligent perspective on fashion that’s focused on personal style – the way women...
The Gentlewoman celebrates modern women of style and purpose. Its fabulous biannual magazine offers a fresh and intelligent perspective on fashion that’s focused on personal style – the way women...
A dirty lil tale written and translated by Amalia Ulman in which a woman gets a job in El Cobrador del Frac, thanks to the gender equality policy executed by...
This book serves as an introduction to the key elements of good design. Broken into sections covering the fundamental elements of design, key works by acclaimed designers serve to illustrate...
Born in Munich, Germany, photographer Marco Gehlhar grew up between Florence, Italy, and Berlin, Germany. Marco has curated photographic exhibitions and collaborated with notable figures in documentary and artistic photography,...
-Suitable for ages 7 and up- Join much-loved wildlife expert Éanna Ní Lamhna as she takes us on a trip through wildlife habitats - from bogs to beaches and woodland...
-Suitable for ages 7 and up- Everything your child needs to know about Irish farms! Did you know that there are almost 2,000,000 pigs in Ireland? And that sheep have...
-Suitable for ages 7 and up- Join historian Myles Dungan as he guides you through the history of our amazing island. Take an historical trip back in time to visit...
Suitable for ages 7 and up Join political buff David McCullagh and illustrator Graham Corcoran as they guide you through all the things that make our country work. Why do...
-Suitable for ages 7 and up- Join Trinity’s Professor Luke O’Neill on the greatest journey of them all. From the very big to the very small – vast galaxies to...
-Suitable for ages 7 and up- There’s nothing the Irish like more than talking about the weather!Here meteorologist Joanna Donnelly explains what weather is and how it happens. From cold...
The Gubu Dolls Saga contains a novella set in the Gubu Dolls universe and a section explaining the concept behind the Gubu Dolls art project, which is on permanent public...
Drawing from all three of Myers’ previous books published by RRB Photobooks, The Guide is the best of The Portraits, Looking at the Overlooked and The End Of Industry combined...
The Happy Reader is a unique magazine about reading for anyone who wishes to stay inspired, informed and entertained. With beautiful typography, the magazine is a design object which celebrates...
The Heart of the Race: Black Women’s Lives in Britain, by Beverley Bryan, Stella Dadzie, and Suzanne Scafe, is a powerful document of the day-to-day realities of Black women in Britain....
Exploring castles, museums and manor houses, megaliths, moors, mountains and lakes, this lavishly illustrated travel guide covers the rich history of magic and the occult in Britain and Northern Ireland...
A banged up tube TV; a studded pair of roller-skates; a handmade budgie box. At first glance these goods might seem better suited for a landfill. But at The Hill...
While balancing unpaid emotional and domestic labour with full time paid work, Emma O'Brien placed her photographic practice on hold. It was an indulgence she couldn't afford, Motherhood demanded this...
While balancing unpaid emotional and domestic labour with full-time paid work, Emma O'Brien placed her photographic practice on hold. It was an indulgence she couldn't afford; Motherhood demanded this sacrifice....
Fergus Feehily's new artist’s book, The Horse and The Rider, brings together many reflections on thinking about and experiencing art, and alternative ways of seeing and understanding artistic values. The...
The House of Raw Matter follows the deluxe limited edition of 15 made in 2012 within the exhibition programmes of Le Centre d’art Le LAIT in Albi and Art3, Valence. Niek...