Book of the Day Posted Mar 03, 2016

Book of the day > Clint Woodside – Undercover Cars

Book of the day > Clint Woodside – Undercover Cars. Kill Your Idols. Essay by Mike Slack. “What strikes me now, looking at this fresh new edit, is not the boring ubiquity of the subject matter – the deadpan Christo-like charm of all these tarps attached to all these automobiles (“hey, instant conceptual art!”) – but the manmade environments Woodside is showing us in the photographs, and the sense of walking-and-looking that the series implies. Never mind the covered cars; look at what surrounds them. the photos – mostly off hand, in various analog formats – are oddly alive with endearing residential architecture and everyday human habitation/habit (well-worn apartments and houses, painted garage doors, oil-stained driveways), and the familiar flora of Southern California (looming, disheveled palms; massive weird shrubs; dense, dark ficus trees; unruly ivy). The word “undercover” is especially apt here too, not only because “Clint Woodside” sounds like a character out of a classic LA film noir, but also because – in a strange twist – while the recurring subject of these pictures is “cars” (a quintessentially LA theme), the real subject remains hidden in plain sight: the intimate, everyday human narratives swirling around the cars. Woodside is just gathering evidence.  As a series, Woodside’s “undercover cars” loosely documents a place and a time but they’re also a record of his photographic obsession, a long-term attachment to a simple theme from which more complex themes can emerge and evolve.” – Mike Slack

 

 

Book of the Day Posted Mar 02, 2016

Book of the day > Sonia Delaunay

Book of the day > Sonia Delaunay. Tate. “Sonia Delaunay was one of the most important and fundamental artists of the early 20th-century Parisian avant-garde. With over 250 illustrations and groundbreaking essays, the book illustrates a long and varied career. This volume follows Delaunay’s painting from her early period in Paris, influenced by Fauvism, through her interest in abstractionism, collaborations with artists and poets, and explorations of color theory together with her husband, Robert Delaunay. Also represented is her work retranslating her experiments in painting into the realm of fashion as well as costume and set design. Delaunay continued to develop her interest in different media, creating mosaics, tapestries, and lithographs. Her late paintings and gouaches evoked a renewed interest in abstraction and color, marking her seminal role in the development of postwar abstract and applied art.”

Book of the Day Posted Mar 01, 2016

Book of the day > Surfing. 1778-2015

Book of the day > Surfing. 1778-2015 by Jim Heimann. Taschen. “This platinum tome is the most comprehensive visual history of surfing to date, marking a major cultural event as much as a publication. Following three and a half years of meticulous research, it brings together more than 900 images to chart the evolution of surfing as a sport, a lifestyle, and a philosophy.

The book is arranged into five chronological chapters, tracing surfing culture from the first recorded European contact in 1778 by Captain James Cook to the global and multi-platform phenomenon of today. Utilizing institutions, collections, and photographic archives from around the world, and with accompanying essays by the world’s top surf journalists, it celebrates the sport on and off the water, as a community of 20 million practitioners and countless more devotees, and as a leading influence on fashion, film, art, and music.

An unrivaled tribute to the breadth, complexity, and richness of surfing, this book is a must-have for any serious player on the surfing scene and anybody who aspires to the surfing lifestyle. As one surfing scribe has declared, “There has never been a book like this, and there will never be another one again.”

 

Book of the Day Posted Feb 25, 2016

Book of the day > Dzama / Pettibon

Book of the day > Dzama / Pettibon. David Zwirner Books. “Raymond Pettibon has been making zines since he graduated from UCLA in the late seventies, but he has rarely collaborated as he did with Marcel Dzama on Dzama / Pettibon. After meeting at David Zwirner Books in 2015 to discuss possible projects, the two artists began to embark on their shared endeavor—something that would develop into an exceptionally beautiful, exquisite corpse–inspired form. Pettibon and Dzama traded drawings and spent the rest of the summer reworking each other’s pieces—illustrating, collaging, accentuating, and writing—to make a brand new body of collaborative work. Months later, the unique pieces arrived back at David Zwirner Books where they were photographed and arranged in zine form in close collaboration with both artists.” 

Book of the Day Posted Feb 24, 2016

Book of the day > Concordia by Jonathan Danko Kielkowski

Book of the day > Concordia by Jonathan Danko Kielkowski. White Press Verlag.  “On the evening of January 13, 2012 one of the largest cruise ships in the Mediterranean wrecked just off the Tuscan island of Giglio . More than 4,000 people were evacuated in the course, 32 lost their lives. The cause of the disaster qualifies human error. The images of a tilted luxury liner have gone around the world, in total they peddle the idea of ​​a giant whale stranded. The sinking of the Costa Concordia, which occurred almost exactly 100 years after the Titanic, is often interpreted as a portent for the ongoing European crisis.” Drawn to the wreckage, photographer Jonathan Danko Kielkowski swam out to it under the cover of darkness to take pictures: “The wrecked Cruise Ship is visible and attracts me like a magnet, so I finally venture to swim across. Against all odds, I find the shipwreck freely accessible — neither fences nor security personnel! Rather, the doors are open, lights are turned on, no man can be seen—nothing in the way.”

 

Book of the Day Posted Feb 19, 2016

Book of the day > Mickalene Thomas: MUSE

Book of the day > Mickalene Thomas: MUSE. Aperture. “Mickalene Thomas, known for her large-scale, multitextured and rhinestone-encrusted paintings of domestic interiors and portraits, identifies the photographic image as a defining touchstone for her practice. Thomas began to photograph herself and her mother as a student at Yale, studying under David Hilliard—a pivotal experience for her as an artist. This volume is the first to gather together her various approaches to photography, including portraits, collages, Polaroids and other processes. The work is a personal act of deconstruction and reappropriation. Working primarily in her studio, Thomas' portraits draw equally from memories of her mother, 1970s black-is-beautiful images of women such as supermodel Beverly Johnson and actress Vonetta McGee, Édouard Manet's odalisque figures and the mise-en-scène studio portraiture of James Van Der Zee and Malick Sidibé. The interior space of her studio, a reappearing character in many of her photographs and paintings, frequently takes on as much of a performative role as her models do. The space exudes a thick, cozy physicality from its layers of fur, rugs, wood paneling and multipatterned linoleum tiles—all of which are richly laden with sensory triggers of a 1970s American rumpus room.”

 

Book of the Day Posted Feb 18, 2016

Book of the day > Gasoline and Magic, Hilar Stadler

Book of the day > Gasoline and Magic, Hilar Stadler. Edition Patrick Frey/Museum im Bellpark. “Everything about them is cool. The baby blue Porsche 917, the Chevy Camaro, the blue-, red- and yellow-striped overalls, the boys in low-buttoned shirts, sporting moustaches and a full head of hair, with the sunshine in their faces. Women wearing thick eyeliner and bell-bottoms, girls in crocheted bikinis at the finishing line, garlands of flowers for the winner. Motor sports in the 1960s, ’70s and ’80s gave rise to a whole world of imagery that arouses a certain wistfulness nowadays. Not only a nostalgia for beautiful old racing cars, but a more comprehensive yearning for the days when even major auto races were still held on ordinary roads, when ambitious auto mechanics would tinker away at a racing car in the local garage and international Grand Prix stars were still approachable. Gilles Villeneuve pushes a strand of hair behind his ear, Pedro Rodriguez rests up on a little stone wall, Jo Siffert stands around in white jeans and cowboy boots, Ayrton Senna is absorbed in thought. The cars race through Monaco and Le Mans and over the hills of Palermo. Most of the pictures in Gasoline and Magic, often impressive and quasi intimate shots, were taken by amateur photographers, who now share with us their fascination with fast cars. Swiss filmmaker and collector Thomas Horat spent years tracking down, labeling and archiving these pictures, which he presented for the first time to the world at large in Gasoline and Magic – and at the show "VROOOOAAAMMM" at the Museum im Bellpark in Kriens, Switzerland.”

Book of the Day Posted Feb 17, 2016

Book of the day > Todd Hido: Khrystyna’s World

Book of the day > Todd Hido: Khrystyna’s World. Reflex  Amsterdam. Signed: $ 150.  “Khrystyna has the rare ability to become unrecognizable; to become somebody else - many different people, in fact. Todd Hido, meanwhile, had never really bought into the idea of a muse. He had never worked so consistently with a single model before, but with just one Khrystyna he found himself capturing endless others: characters, times, places. Throughout Khrystyna's World, however different the implied stories that Hido creates across this sweeping body of work, a single constant is Khrystyna's fullness of expression. Never simply a prop for hair and makeup, she is an animate communication of Hido's complex environments, their spirits, shadows and combustible associations. In a single collection of photographs, Hido illustrates a sense of empowerment with the skeleton of vulnerability, sarcasm in the face of threat, and playfulness despite gravity. Khrystyna's World exists outside of time and place, therefore. The physical world shapes the title character's internal one, at the same time that it is the reflection of it.”

Book of the Day Posted Feb 09, 2016

Book of the day > Robert Mapplethorpe: The Archive

Book of the day > Robert Mapplethorpe: The Archive. Getty Research Institute. “Celebrated photographer Robert Mapplethorpe challenged the limits of censorship and conformity, combining technical and formal mastery with unexpected, often provocative content that secured his place in history. Mapplethorpe’s artistic vision helped shape the social and cultural fabric of the 1970s and ’80s and, following his death in 1989 from AIDS, informed the political landscape of the 1990s. His photographic works continue to resonate with audiences all over the world. Throughout his career, Mapplethorpe preserved studio files and art from every period and vein of his production, including student work, jewelry, sculptures, and commercial assignments. The resulting archive is fascinating and astonishing. With over 400 illustrations, this volume surveys a virtually unknown resource that sheds new light on the artist’s motivations, connections, business acumen, and talent as a curator and collector."

Book of the Day Posted Feb 05, 2016

Book of the day and book signing tomorrow (2/6, 4-6) with coffee courtesy of Cognoscenti! > Hollywood Café: Coffee With The Stars by Steven Rea

Book of the day and book signing tomorrow (2/6, 4-6) with coffee courtesy of Cognoscenti! > Hollywood Café: Coffee With The Stars by Steven Rea. Schiffer. “Put on a pot of your favorite coffee, perk up, and enjoy nostalgic black-and-white photos that celebrate screen icons from the Silent Era through the eighties, making and drinking their own cups of joe, java, pour-overs, and percolated brews. Hollywood Café bridges the vibrant coffee culture of right-now with the glamorous coffee culture of the star-studded past. A dream cast of nearly 200 stars—Humphrey Bogart, Marilyn Monroe, Frank Sinatra, Grace Kelly, Audrey Hepburn, Katharine Hepburn, Bette Davis, Clara Bow, Charlie Chaplin, W. C. Fields, Robert Mitchum, Rita Hayworth, Bob Hope, Michael Caine, Jane Fonda, Ava Gardner, Jackie Gleason, Lucille Ball, Elvis Presley, Jayne Mansfield, Sammy Davis Jr., William Holden, Lauren Bacall, John Wayne, and many more—is captured on the set, on the run, in costume and out, behind-the-scenes and at the kitchen table, refilling and refueling, sipping and savoring, drinking the good stuff, just like us.”

 

Order a signed copy here or join us tomorrow - details are here!

 

Thanks to Cognoscenti!

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