There’s something wonderful about a road trip, a certain sense of nostalgia and adventure that can’t be matched.In these pages photographers transport us through their imagery, show us how they...
The crumpled sheets of an empty bed, fresh cut flowers in a drinking glass, cellophane dancing in a gust of wind – what does poetry look like? In these 100 poems without...
During a transformative period in Irish history, ‘Who Fears to Speak’ is a project which hones in on the experience of the young people from the republican stronghold areas of...
Standing in stark contrast to the sanitised, shampooed, images of dogs seen in so many calendars and magazines, the Acts of Dog zine is a small sample from a much...
BIT FACADE is a 224 page compilation of photographic work taken over a number of years and printed while on residency at FLACC Sculpture Workspace, Genk, Belgium, and designed by...
022 - Morten Lasskogen is the twenty-second in an ongoing Bi-Monthly series publishing the work of emerging photographers. ‘All my art revolves around a profound fascination with light. For me,...
The photographs in Americans Seen were made between 1979 and 1986, when Sage Sohier was a young photographer living in Boston. As Sohier writes in her introduction, “In that pre-digital and...
Time is not bound by culture, and neither is nature. Jeff Liao followed the Chinese 24 Solar Terms timetable to document the micro changes that happen in this phenomenal “man-made...
Beautifully printed in duotone on Korean art paper, Fleeting Gestures features an accordion binding with cloth covers, presented in a raven-black cloth slipcase. RJ Muna’s photographic series, Fleeting Gestures, captures various images...
“Carpoolers is a deceptively powerful photobook, so well constructed that we’re suddenly eager to see more of Carpoolers remains a highly critical and vital body of work in which we...
This extraordinary group of photographs, made between 1988 and 1991, provides a compelling portrait both of the city itself and of the time in which they were made. Steinmetz’s relationship...
“In my opinion, Bob Kolbrener is the most brilliant California landscape photographer since Ansel Adams.”— Gary F. Kurutz, Curator Emeritus of Special Collections, California State Library The second monograph on...
Tavitian and Moriyama both focus on framing everyday subjects, capturing moments on 35mm film while embracing the unpredictability of the medium. Their work reflects a deep fascination with urban landscapes...
It’s time to join the Egyptian Wanderer, Amr El-Bayoumi, in his unique photographic tales of adventure, curiosity and creativity. A wonderful, imaginative experience into what makes us all artists. Amr...
Featuring 100 stunning color photographs of queer, interracial couples taken by a renowned photographer for the New York Times Magazine, Time, Rolling Stone, and more, this incredible photo and story collection depicts...
Wren Day, also known Lá an Dreoílín, is a traditional celebration that takes place on December 26th in various parts of Ireland, including Dingle, County Kerry. Traditionally, men and boys...
Sionnachuighim, meaning “I play the Fox”, is thought to be one possible origin of the word shenanigans, and in this work, shenanigans take centre stage. As a teenager, I entered...
'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,...
DOMESTIC is grounded in research on the food production industry, and focuses on relationships between humans and animals, eaters and eaten. The project stems from a batch of found 16mm...
Fantasy Island offers a comprehensive exploration of the last 50 years of Irish photography, featuring the work of 70 Irish artists. The publication takes a stripped-back approach, prioritising the strength...
Inspired by political campaign posters from the Polish 2023 parliamentary elections, The Powers That Be photobook contemplates the links between electioneering and political outcomes. Whilst travelling around Poland researching coal mining...
HeghDI' vem ghaH, tu'lu' Dinosaur (which translates from Klingon as “Upon awakening, the dinosaur was still there”, a micro-story by Augusto Monterroso) tells a previously unknown story about the Klingon race....
In Leve, Martín Estol claims a space for fantasy. As opposed to a conventional reading of the family biography, text and images coalesce in this account, exploring and honouring the figure...
HUN is Julia Mejnertsen’s long-term photographic research about our perception of nature. Through her mother’s hunting practice, the Danish photographer reflects both on the complex family bonds we build and...
Los tamarindos de La Concha [La Concha’s Tamarinds] is the continuation of photographer Ricardo Cases's urban exploration, which began in 2018 in the city of Valencia and was published in 2023...
Paddy Kiernan is a musician and photographer, based in Dublin. His image Kerrymount Rise was selected for the TLP Edition A New Normal, published in 2020. In 2021, he self-published...
The eighth publication from SMUT Press is After Life, the debut photobook by London-based Italian photographer Michele Baron. Known for his spontaneous and punchy photographic style, Baron captures the underground...
I’m handy is a photobook featuring cropped images of hands captured by Catherine throughout her career. Accompanied by short, humorous words, these photographs highlight one of the most expressive parts...
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...
TAIPEI; a solo long-form project by Yemeni American artist Ibi Ibrahim. Roaming through foreign streets in the island’s capital, Ibrahim’s extrinsic eye lingers on corners of mundane quietude. The act of archiving...
Using CGI, Canadian artist Benjamin Freedman presents a captivating image sequence which meticulously reconstructs his childhood memories of a family road trip to Maine in 1999. Blurring the line between...
Urthworks draws on a trilogy of films by Ben Rivers imagining the future of a planet at three stages after environmental collapse. Working with 16mm film and digital imaging technology,...
For her first feature film, The Virgin Suicides, Sofia Coppola commissioned British fashion photographer Corinne Day to join her on set. Renowned for her unadorned, grungy photographs of iconic models...
Have a Nice Day Press is delighted to present A Faggot is a Unit, an artist book by Berlin-based artist, filmmaker, and writer Padraig Robinson. This publication brings together two original screenplays for...
In you can’t go home again, Antigoni Papantoni reflects on her experiences of the past decade, feeling like a sailor adrift between cultures, gradually losing her sense of belonging. This...
This extraordinary work, captured between 2005 and 2019, challenges the conventional narrative of East versus West and offers a striking visual exploration of life in post-industrial America and Russia. Through...
Our philosophical understanding of the photograph may find its bearings in notions of time and the past, but our tools for making images are imbedded in the aggressive stride of...
Ukrainian soldiers engage in intensive combat training at an unmarked location; a female choir rehearse in a Sarajevo theatre once used to stage defiant performances during the Bosnian War; youths...
Few subjects can evoke the entwinement of the corporeal, personal, and political so succinctly as that of hair. Throughout history, hair has been charged with significance and is resonant with...
Publication accompanying the exhibition at New Art Projects, London, by Brian Teeling and Dorje de Burgh, featuring commissioned essays by Una Mullally and Sam Moore. The exhibition, as documented in...
Alex Prager is a photographer and filmmaker whose elaborate sets and complex staging draw on a rich cultural heritage of cinematic style, informed by street photography, to produce work that...
Belfast is a city segregated and divided: its so-called peace walls , built to separate Unionist and Nationalist communities, are taller in places even than the Berlin Wall. For his...
Penelope Umbrico’s project Solar Eclipses is made up of a collection of collages created using images of solar eclipses found in the New York Public Library Picture Collection. She creates...
Out Of Order: Bad Display III consists of images of screens cropped from used and broken LCD TVs, computer monitors, and laptops found for sale on e-shops. Now out of order,...
In the midst of the global financial crisis that began in 2008, Penelope Umbrico started noticing large quantities of used office desks for sale online. In the pictures advertising them,...
Dry Hole is an intuitive selection of images extracted from a collection of Real Photo Postcards (RPPCs). David Thomson emphasises details contained within the larger frame of the postcards by cropping...
Don McCullin has been making photographs for more than 50 years, first capturing the small dramas of everyday life in 1950s London, then travelling to the world’s most dangerous conflict...
The Luton Auguries began with the purchase of the newspaper archives of the city of Luton. From this vast source material, Timothy Prus selects and assembles a series of images, creating a surrealist...
Do green people exist? A quick search brings up the legend of the green children of Woolpit. This tale recounts the discovery of a brother and sister who appeared largely...
The OODA Loop is known in business and in warfare. It was originally devised by John Boyd, a USAF officer who was active in the Korean war and who later...
‘The Night Climbers of Cambridge was published in 1937 by Chatto & Windus, a reputable house that had brought out the first English translations of Proust in 1922. The author was...
The first Earth-born creature to enter space was Laika, a stray dog from Moscow that blasted off aboard Sputnik 2 on 3 November 1957, heralding the beginning of the space...
Handle with gloves. Ink is not fixed and may smudge or transfer. TV Casualty is a graphic study of the horror of nostalgia in the decline of the American Dream. On...
The title of this two-volume set gives little clue to the content beyond the fact that 82 photos are included in each volume. Like some bureaucratic code, it marks but...
Is it a book, is it a sculpture? No, it’s a Me Nu. This work by Ruben Lundgren and Timothy Prus has been produced to coincide with their exhibition “Anything that...
This book tells the story of how plants arrived on this planet and gave rise to other forms of life. Using images archived at AMC (Archive of Modern Conflict), the book...
‘Right from the start, almost every appearance he made was catastrophic … catastrophe is his means of operation, and his central instrument of governance.’– Adi Ophir For their version of...
Roger Hilton (1911–1975) produced the works now known as the ‘Late Gouaches’ and ‘Night Letters’ during the final two years of his life at his cottage in Cornwall’s West Penwith....
Silvermine is a set of five photo albums each containing 20 prints. The negatives were salvaged from a recycling plant on the edge of Beijing, where they had been sent to...
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...
Published to coincide with Notes Home, an exhibition curated by the Archive of Modern Conflict’s Timothy Prus and Ed Jones for Format Festival 2013, issue 5 of Amc2 features picture postcards from the archive’s permanent collection....
As Marie Belorgey writes in her essay: “The pictures open and fold back on themselves by turns. They renew their sound, their weight, unfold their depth, or don’t, depending on...
These photographs by Alessandro Cirillo are part of a single performative action of which he himself is an actor, in some way adopting its practice. Not only do the bodies...
The author presents through this photographic book a unique collection of portraits of transgender personalities collected during four years of work between the Calcutta area and other cities of West...
What is - indeed, what was - the meaning of memories, of the thoughts of a buried memory that emerge in our mind, like apparently clear images? Some let us...
The exceptionally numerous and diverse environmental criticalities poisoning the province of Brescia (Italy) make this territory a representative case for understanding how current development models are absolutely unsustainable and destructive...
The author explores the generational disconnection of the new city and, through this, the lost memories of the old Gibellina. With the weight of history on their shoulders, it's now...
State of Guerrero is Mexico's leading opium producer. This primacy has led to internal feuds between criminal groups that compete for territory. One of the most evident effects related to...
On the evening of 13 January 2012, the Costa Concordia with 4,229 people on board hit a shallow water in front of the Giglio Island. Three hours later the cruise...
In 2004, Norbert Schöbel and his partner Thorsten Baensch started walking from their adopted home in Brussels to Munich, the city of Norbert’s birth. This was the first big step...
Hibernation is a well known phenomenon in the natural world: a seasonal state of minimal activity, as an adaptation to winter conditions. But also man-made places can enter this dormant state...
A Certain Logic of Expectations proposes a counter-narrative of the British city of Oxford that resists the visual imperatives of its ancient university. For the past five years, Mexican photographer...
Fifty years ago, in an era popularly known as the Space Age, optimism concerning scientific progress seemed endless. The desire to put the first people on the Moon spurred advances...
'I had heard that some had been so wrought up by the play as to become temporarily insane, and run about town haunted by wildest hallucinations.' — Joseph Krauskopf, A Rabbi’s Impressions of the...
'I saw empty pools and recycled my water at home. Still, I found it hard to grasp. The scarcity turned out to be way less visible than I expected and...
To whom does the city belong? Haven tells the coming of age story of a boy in a rapidly changing environment, based on memories of surroundings that no longer exist. Sem...
How can we visualise people’s state of mind in times of confusion and transformation? Some Way Out of Here by Jos Jansen (NL) explores a new and different way to represent the...
The lines that divide us are the spaces we share. Driveways, paths, entrances and walls. These are the boundaries that separate our homes, but also the in between areas we...
How to Live Here is a visual arts project that asks questions about the artist's desire to return to rural Ireland as a queer woman who once left in search...
Commissioned to make a new work for the Norwegian Parliament in Oslo, Fiona Tan collected family photograph albums from as broad and varied a background as possible, eventually selecting two...
Invited by the Biennale of Sydney 2006, Fiona Tan has selected images from private photo albums from approximately ninety inhabitants of Sydney, and created a wall installation of photographs exhibited...
Drawing on the documentary tradition, in combination with contemporary concerns of participation and egalitarianism, Vox Populi, Tokyo continues this ever-expanding mappo mundi. Vox Populi, Tokyo is published to coincide with...
Indonesian-born artist Fiona Tan has been commissioned to make London the focus of the fifth and final installment of her Vox Populi series. Following her work in Norway, Sydney, Tokyo...
Spotlighting work from twelve contemporary photographers from Denmark who are working in the broad field of documentary photography, this anthology encompasses a vast range of styles and subjects. Whether they...
Bitter Sweet Soft is a series of environmental portraits of Saharawi people, an ethnic group originally from Western Sahara, living in the refugee camps of Tinduf, Algeria, in the middle...
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....
Seventy-five photograms. For each day, one object, one image. That is the protocol for Contre-jour, the result of a photographic experiment conducted by Canadian artist Josée Pedneault in Tokyo. Contre-Jour...
A hook echo is a radar signature for the part of a supercell tornado wherein the clouds come together with maximum force. Its name derives from the hook-shaped formation with...
The idea of this collection of volumes is not that of a diary but a literary autobiography. Soon a second volume 2001-2007 will be edited, then the third one 2007-2012,...
The idea of this collection of volumes is not that of a diary but a literary autobiography. Soon a second volume 2001-2007 will be edited, then the third one...
A unique leporello presentation of the latest project by German photographer Kathleen Alisch, printed in black, white, and silver - Winner of the Belfast Photo Festival Photobook award 2022 Presented...
Involuntary Images contains images compiled from the artist’s ongoing archive of newspaper photographs. The book mirrors the climate of disaster, death and collapse while leaning on the history and the...
Splitting consists of found photographs which document the illegal destruction of a building lying on a disputed property line in a residential area south-west of Oslo. Two workers were hired...
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...
A Sudden Drop features photographs of clothing found on streets in a central part of Oslo. The book is part of a larger body of work that includes cartographical material,...
Originally published in 2016, this second expanded edition coincides with an exhibition at The Royal Photographic Society in late 2019, marking the first UK showing of the project. The recipient...
Guy Bolongaro (born Crewe, 1978) studied sociology before moving to London to become a social worker. Around 2014, burnt out by work and frustrated by his attempts at making documentary...
A book of photographs featuring new Irish models in the Nineties. The book has two sections. The first is a traditional photobook, focusing primarily on 1994 -2004. What's special about...
Presenting a diverse geographic and ethnic selection, the What They Saw anthology interprets historical photobooks by women in the broadest sense possible: classic bound books, portfolios, personal albums, unpublished books,...
South Miami Beach is a tiny gem of Art Deco architecture, warm sun and cool breezes. It was also the winter destination for many seniors throughout the 70s and 80s....
The last copy is reduced in price due to minor damage on the cover.A searing, diaristic portrayal of a city and society in revolution by Magnum nominee Myriam Boulos. In...
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...
Beggar’s Honey is an exploration into the clandestine world of click farms. Click farms are shadowy operations that are responsible for artificially inflating the engagement metrics of content on social...
Gloryland is an intimate story of the last West Virginia serpent-handling church tucked deep within the Appalachian Mountains. Welcome to this rare world of old mystic religious America on the...
008 - Nick Prideaux is the eighth in an ongoing collaboration with Open Doors Gallery publishing the work of emerging photographers. I approach photography in a mindful way and try...
An epic folkloric guide to rambling, re-enchanting the landscape, and reconnecting with nature. In this book is a radical idea. By walking the ancient landscape of Britain, engaging with the...
Grounded in sustained immersion and participation in the communities he photographed, Chris Killip’s keenly observed work chronicled ordinary people’s lives in stark, yet sympathetic, detail. His photographs are recognized as...
Not available for sale - to view please visit the PhotoIreland Collection upstairs in The Library Project, Temple Bar. This photobook was created to accompany the exhibition of the same...
The fox holds significant importance in the UK, as Londoners are divided in their adoration or disdain for these creatures. Notably, the social tensions arising from the Brexit conflict mirror...
'Om (Mother) is a collaborative photography project by Barbara Debeuckelaere and all the women of eight families from Tel Rumeida in Hebron, Palestine. Apart from Jerusalem, Hebron is the only...
Almost All the Flowers in My Mother’s Garden is a 144-page work containing more than 100 pictures of flowers, mainly photographed in the author’s mother’s garden, and intimate memories of...
Highly regarded for his black-and-white portraits, Mark Steinmetz is renowned for producing powerful pictures that capture the strong sense of displacement and isolation felt by many young Americans. His celebrated...
Joshua K. Jackson's latest monograph is set against the backdrop of our new chaotic society where we contend with often overwhelming feelings of fear, anxiety and loneliness, whilst simultaneously seeking...
For more than two decades, Paul Knight has taken intimacy as his subject, considering its relationship to representation and the social designs that underpin its expression. This has led him,...
Drawing from the nearly half a million photographs and documents comprising the Historic American Buildings Survey held in the US Library of Congress, this book constructs a fictional ‘one-way road...
Newly remastered edition of Todd Hido’s iconic and long-out-of-print second monograph, Outskirts. Printed on heavy weight matte art paper, the new printing of Outskirts surpasses the original printing with more...
Newly remastered edition of Todd Hido’s iconic and highly sought after monograph, House Hunting. To celebrate the upcoming 20th anniversary of this important book, certainly one of the most influential...
A sophomore photobook by Irish photographer Kieran Power.Returning to the place you grew up will always harbour a mixed response, feelings of nostalgia for the days gone by. Faded memories...
The book is based on the art project GRANNY and contains well-known photography and archives, texts, reviews which never published before.“The project is dedicated to the study of a mental...
A chapbook written by Sean O'Toole about a trip to Mali in 2007. Sean O’Toole (b. 1968) is a Cape Town-based journalist and writer. He is the former editor of...
Japanese jazz bars and coffee shops are insular worlds where time ceases to exist, removed from the speed and chaos of the modern urban landscape. Tokyo Jazz Joints is a...
Following the survey monograph, this publication is dedicated to Masahisa Fukase’s emblematic series on his two cats: Sasuke and Momoe, combining unpublished and iconic images. In 1977, Fukase turned his lenses...
It is with the story, the one preceding the click of the shutter but also of the brain when an idea pops into it – that Sophie Calle opens Because. She...
Since man first walked the Earth … in heels, no other art form has wielded as unique an influence on pop culture as Drag. Drag artists have now sashayed their...
As the sixteenth instalment of their ‘Books on Books Project’, New York-based publisher Errata Editions re-released Krass Clement's photobook Drum, photographed in an Irish pub on a single evening with only...
The starting point for this book is Evelyn Hofer’s Dublin: A Portrait, which features an in-depth essay by V. S. Pritchett and photos by Hofer, and enjoyed great popularity upon its original...
Caged is a collection of photography by artist Rachel Naughton. Caged speaks to being at a point in life where you begin to feel trapped in the routine of it...
Photographs by Erica Van Horn of Ulrich Ruckreim's barn housing his sculptures in Clonegal on the border between Co. Carlow and Co. Wexford in Ireland. Reprinted issued as part of...
'This book is soft. Just like your insides, just like mine. The photos were given to me by a janitor that worked in the late ‘80s in a hospital gone...
(Inhale) Fuck you because you think you’re a famous photographer! Fuck your depth of field! Fuck your focus! Fuck your sharpness! Fuck your exposure settings! Fuck your visual weight because...
Leaves was shot in a public park in London. The video shows a meadow surrounded by trees as its theatrical protagonist. Susanne Bürner has conceived a publication of lose leaves...
"Seninle Basam Dertte" is the story of a distance that will never be closed, a matted knot that cannot be untied, a wound that never ceases to itch. The story...
Ali Beşikçi's photography book introduces the reader to his adventure where he questions his relationship with his own practice. A selection created by the artist inspired by an obscure photograph...
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...
It has been a long time since we’ve seen undistorted portraits of working women in print media. Since the start of the era of consumerism and social media, what we...
Two leporellos around the river Isère in France as a former place of labour. The leporello form refers to tourist souvenirs from the 50ies and 60ies and is at odds...
Indians first came to Fiji as indentured labourers in 1879. Since the Rabuka coup d’état in 1987, and three subsequent Fiji coups, Indian-Fijians have been emigrating from the country in...
It is the second volume in a social and political trilogy of artist books: ‘I Saw You’, 2007; ‘I Must Behave’, 2009; ‘I Drive You Crazy, to the Moon’, which...
Still Looking Good is triadic collaboration between siblings Oliver Connew (dancer/choreographer) and Alice Connew (photographer) that brings together dance, sound and a visual aesthetic that are drawn from and reference pervasive...
Das Ende tells the story of a relationship that began at an electronic music festival in Germany and ended a couple of years after that, leading to first time heartbreak,...
The exceptional mineral wealth in the Urals has provided the resources for Russia’s economic development and military defence for over 300 years. In the twentieth century, the region became central...
'Where I was born, the countrified on September is yellow and sometimes orange, the thistles are dry. Everything is Sun and colour during sunset. Only the holm oak keeps the...
Portraits of dead domestic plants as failed attempts to import wilderness into our structured lives.
Published by Monroe BooksEdition of 500Softcover24 pages185 x 245 mm
A collection of 75 black and white photographs, the book documents different gardening and property management practices in Germany, particularly in allotment gardens and cemeteries.Published by Monroe Books Edition of 500Softcover128 pages120 x 165...
Both protest and party, Vancouver Pride celebrates the LGBTQAI2S+ community and their right to be their full selves. Softcover zine, hand stitched, including a postcard on front and back, with...
The Canadian Rangers are part-time reservists, taken mainly from the indigenous Inuit population, who provide a military presence in remote, isolated and coastal communities of Northern Canada. Acting as the...
"Myself, Friends, Lovers and Others" is a photographic series by Latvian photographer Arnis Balcus. Most images were taken between 2000 and 2004, shot on Olympus Mju II film camera. Being...
"As I was going through my pictures, I came across a folder full of randomly selected photographs from various projects or sources that maybe discontinued, or cannot be categorized. It...
'A factory in transition from workplace to event venue is haunted by Foucault’s ideas of a disciplinary society and the ghosts of former workers. But I myself feel like a...
This documentary photobook depicts the 'Seamus Heaney's country' of south County Londonderry. Thoroughly researched and beautifully executed it focuses on places related to the poet's childhood e.g. his birthplace at...
I Also Fight Windmills is the first photobook by the Polish-British artist Ania Ready who responded visually to literary texts written by the modernist, trilingual and largely forgotten author of...
Baron is pleased to present artist Joyce Lee’s debut book, dedicated to the artists archive of watercolour and pencil works, exploring aspects of love, sex and sexuality, and the human...
For Alice Hawkins second book ‘Dear Dolly’, the photographer uses herself to appropriate the imagery and guises employed by country western sensation and American dream, Dolly Parton. As Hawkins states herself...
'The view of reality, as an exotic prize to be tracked down and captured by the diligent hunter-with-a-camera has informed photography from the beginning, and marks the confluence of the...