Book of the day > Christian Patterson: Bottom of the Lake
Book of the day > Christian Patterson: Bottom of the Lake. Koenig Books. “Bottom of the Lake is a 256-page facsimile of artist Christian Patterson's family telephone book for his hometown, Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, printed in 1973, soon after Patterson's birth.
This artist's book includes found markings and reproductions of materials inserted in the phone book in addition to Patterson's drawings, photographs and marginalia. This book-within-a-book carefully combines the fact-based phone book with the artist's highly subjective re-imagination of his hometown, playfully juxtaposing different documentary forms and ways of seeing to create a deeply personal, darkly humorous "other" book.
The experience of reading Bottom of the Lake extends beyond its pages with an interactive feature: a telephone number attached to the book connects users with over 100 audio experiences, mixing field recordings, found archival material and performances that recreate the artist's hometown.”

High Desert Test Sites Postcards
Today we feature High Desert Test Sites Postcards !
Each year a carefully curated selection of limited-edition artist postcards is produced to benefit High Desert Test Sites, a Joshua Tree based non-profit that supports intimate and immersive experiences and exchanges between artists, critical thinkers, and general audiences – challenging all to expand their definition of art to take on new areas of relevancy. Sales of the postcards help support future HDTS programming & submissions for new postcards are due October 1st. Available in Joshua Tree and from Arcana ! @highdeserttestsites




Book of the day > Catherine Opie: 700 Nimes Road
Book of the day > Catherine Opie: 700 Nimes Road. Prestel. "The renowned photographer Catherine Opie takes on a challenging documentary project—an “indirect portrait” of Elizabeth Taylor through her home and possessions. One of America’s most celebrated living photographers, Catherine Opie works in series that are remarkably varied in both style and subject matter—from intimate portraits of the LGBTQ community to beautiful, nearly-abstract landscapes featuring icefishing houses. Expanding that astonishing range of subjects further is Opie’s ambitious recent series of photographs taken at the home of late movie star Elizabeth Taylor. Though glamour and celebrity are not common themes in her work, Opie was inspired by the possibilities this project offered—recalling William Eggleston’s series on Elvis Presley’s Graceland, or her own photographs of Obama’s 2008 inauguration, both of which represent indirect portraits of their subjects. The images in this moving collection were culled from photos Opie took over the course of six months, both on the grounds of and inside Taylor’s home. The subjects are wildly diverse—a dogeared remote control manual, closeups of Taylor’s enormous closets, shelves of tchotchkes and priceless works of art—telling more about Taylor’s life than any “celebrity” portrait ever could. Through Opie’s thoughtful curation, Taylor’s home tells a poignant story and reveals the arc of a fascinating life."
Happy Birthday Linda McCartney! 'Throwback' Book of the Day > Linda McCartney: Life in Photographs
‘Throwback’ book of the day in honor of Linda McCartney’s birthday > Linda McCartney: Life in Photographs. Taschen. Collector’s Edition - Signed by Paul McCartney - $3000. Also available in the $39.99 trade edition. We have them both! “From her early rock ’n’ roll portraits, through the final years of The Beatles, via touring with Wings to raising four children with Paul, Linda captured her whole world on film. Her shots range from spontaneous family pictures to studio sessions with Stevie Wonder and Michael Jackson, as well as artists Willem de Kooning and Gilbert and George. Always unassuming and fresh, her work displays a warmth and a feeling for the precise moment that captures the essence of any subject. Whether photographing her children, celebrities, animals, or a fleeting moment of everyday life, she did so without pretension or artifice.”
Book of the day > This Is The House That Jack Built. Edited by Maja Hoffman. Text by Rirkrit Tiravanija.
Book of the day > This Is The House That Jack Built. Edited by Maja Hoffman. Text by Rirkrit Tiravanija. Photographs by François Halard. Steidl. “This book offers an insight into the private contemporary art and design collection of Maja Hoffmann. As Hoffmann enters a new, increasingly public phase of philanthropy embodied by the construction of her Frank Gehry designed, non-profit LUMA Foundation Center in Arles, she is encouraged to share part of her collection to reveal that living with art and amongst artists is a dynamic and sincere experience, as well as a harbor for dreams.
Here photographer François Halard and art director Beda Achermann have created a flow of images depicting very human environments, absent of people yet populated by their spirit. To complete the book, Rirkrit Tiravanija has chosen the British nursery rhyme This Is The House That Jack Built which is dispersed (in his custom-designed font) between the photos: slightly obsessive yet full of humor, the text removes any possible traces of vanity in the purpose of this publication and creates space for Hoffmann’s vision of the world as an extended “house”—a place for storytelling, family, and an ongoing exchange with artists and thinkers. “



Book of the day > Soviet Bus Stops
Book of the day > Soviet Bus Stops. FUEL Publishing. “Photographer Christopher Herwig first noticed the unusual architecture of Soviet-era bus stops during a 2002 long-distance bike ride from London to St. Petersburg. Challenging himself to take one good photograph every hour, Herwig began to notice surprisingly designed bus stops on otherwise deserted stretches of road. Twelve years later, Herwig had covered more than 18,000 miles in 14 countries of the former Soviet Union, traveling by car, bike, bus and taxi to hunt down and document these bus stops.
The local bus stop proved to be fertile ground for local artistic experimentation in the Soviet period, and was built seemingly without design restrictions or budgetary concerns. The result is an astonishing variety of styles and types across the region, from the strictest Brutalism to exuberant whimsy.
Soviet Bus Stops is the most comprehensive and diverse collection of Soviet bus stop design ever assembled, including examples from Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Ukraine, Moldova, Armenia, Abkhazia, Georgia, Lithuania, Latvia, Belarus and Estonia. Originally published in a quickly sold-out limited edition, Soviet Bus Stops, named one of the best photobooks of 2014 by Martin Parr, is now available in a highly anticipated, expanded smaller-format trade edition.”
Book of the day > Kevin Harry: KH Issue 2
Book of the day > Kevin Harry: KH Issue 2. @mrkevinharry. Just in: Kevin Harry’s highly anticipated second issue of his fabulous eponymous ‘zine! This time featuring portraits from the 2014 Afro Punk Festival in Brooklyn. “I wanted to create a zine of portraits that celebrate people of color…our beauty, diversity, strength, style...our vibration. I have found that the people I photograph really appreciate being acknowledged, they appreciate being seen. Often, people will embrace me after I take their picture...saying ‘thank you’! What I really try to capture is a ‘come as you are’ spirit…My aim is to honor the people I'm photographing and to uplift the culture.”
Book of the day and Book Signing/Discussion/Reception tomorrow > Thomas Demand: The Dailies
Book of the day and Book Signing/Discussion/Reception tomorrow (Saturday, 9/12, 4-6)! Join us, please! > Thomas Demand: The Dailies. MACK. “Working within the parameters of his established technique, Thomas Demand created carefully formed paper and card sculptures, a parallel world which is photographed and then destroyed. The Dailies offers only traces – signs of consumption, or the spectres of things left behind. His creations are based on things he saw and photographs he took while travelling and walking the street. They show a world that is familiar but out of reach, like the dancing coloured pins on a clothesline, suspended somewhere between the overfamiliar and the hallucinatory – as if a chance apparition, glimpsed momentarily, before it vanishes into its habitat.
The images lure the viewer into a mirror world, a twin universe made only of paper. But the imperfect models are awash with discrepancies from actual things, and as such, they act as small ruptures that complicate the old indexical bond between a photograph and reality. Demand describes the series as Haiku poetry, simple fragments strung together to inspire reflection; they are the stock of our daily lives, but as they trigger deja vu through performed repetition, they ask us to look again, anew, to find in the repertoire an ordinary but redemptive beauty.”
Book of the day > Bread and a Dog – Natsuko Kuwahara
Book of the day > Bread and a Dog – Natsuko Kuwahara. Phaidon. Featuring (as advertised) bread and dog, as well as recipes and the occasional cat. Have a great weekend!