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    394,-

  • av Richard Smith
    344,-

  • av Giacomo Brunelli
    344,-

    Giacomo Brunelli has been looking hard at animals. His focus is not on the framed and caged exotica of zoos but on the ordinary animals that remain with us to some extent: horses, dogs, cats, chickens, pigeons. He shows us a fox, looking sharply at the camera and poised to flee, and there are numerous birds, a snake and several toads, but this wildness is small and fragile, living in the familiar liminal space where manmade and natural meet and overlap. His animals inhabit farmyards, cobbled streets and the façades of stone buildings. There are no tigers here. Brunelli's animals are often composed only of suggestive fragments. His spare black and white images are attuned to the nuances of a moving mane, a silhouetted whisker, a highlighted, almost illuminated wing. He favours the profile and the counterintuitive angle, setting dark unobservable features against dark undiscernable backgrounds. A dead mouse, on its back, paws in air beside an oversized flower against a stark and distant mountain is no more or less frozen in time than is the growling dog, eyes alight and teeth forever bared; both are icons of states we fear but cannot know. These pictures are timeless and uncanny,powerful in their ordinariness, and emotionally much bigger than their simple subjects. - Alison Nordström, Curator of Photography, George Eastman House.

  • av Martin Parr
    394,-

  • av Giacomo Brunelli
    344,-

    Giacomo Brunelli uses his distinct film-noir style to create a unique and evocative view of London and its well known landmarks.

  • av Lukas Birk
    394,-

    ''Afghan Box Camera'' documents a living form of photography in danger of disappearing forever. Known as the kamra-e-faoree (`instant camerä), Afghanistan is one of the last places on earth where it has continued to be used by photographers as a way of making a living. Hand-made out of wood, it is a camera and darkroom in one.

  • - The Bizarre Life of Writer, Actor, Soho Raconteur Julian Maclaren-Ross
    av Paul Willetts
    226,-

  • av David Goldblatt
    394,-

  • av Phillip Toledano
    394,-

    This is a book of portraits of people who have re-created themselves through plastic surgery.Phillip Toledano believes that we are at the vanguard of a period of human-induced evolution. A turningpoint in history where we are beginning to define not only our own concept of beauty, but of physicalityitself.¿ Beauty has always been a currency, and now that we finally have the technological meansto mint our own, what choices do we make?¿ Is beauty informed by contemporary culture? By history? Or is it defined by the surgeon¿s hand?¿ When we re-make ourselves, are we revealing our true character, or are we stripping awayour very identity?¿But the impact of these faces and the bodies is jarring, even alienating. The sitters¿ motivations for theseenormous changes are undoubtedly personal and deeply felt, but the enormity of that transgressive actionchallenges us as the viewer to sort out our own ideas about beauty and gender.¿¿W.M. HuntPhillip Toledano lives and works in New York. Phillip¿s work is socio-political, and varies in medium, fromphotography, to installation. Toledano has three monographs published on his artistic practice, with themost recent, Days With My Father, being received to critical acclaim.His work has appeared in Vanity Fair, The New York Times Magazine, The New Yorker, Harpers, Esquire,GQ, Wallpaper, The London Times, The Independent, Le Monde, and Interview magazine, amongst others.W.M. Hunt is a New York-based collector, curator, consultant and overall champion of photography. TheUnseen Eye: Photographs from the W.M. Hunt Collection was published by Aperture in the US, andThames & Hudson in the UK, in October 2011.

  • av Gaute Heivoll
    394,-

    'Brother | Sister' tells the story of Edvard and Bergit Bjelland who grew up with their parents and siblings on a small farm in a remote part of Norway on the south-west coast. The farmhouse itself dated back to 1800s and is now a listed building. Edvard was the fourth generation of his family to have owned the farm and had kept horses, cows, pigs, hens and over one hundred sheep. When Elin Høyland first met him, his sister Bergit had recently died, most of the livestock had been sold off and the land rented out. Edvard lived alone looking after just a handful of sheep. Edvard had been the only one to stay on the homestead, though his sister Bergit eventually moved back into the farmhouse with him, after living several years in the city of Stavanger. In the late 1970s she moved out again, but this time to a new house that she had built just a stone's throw from her childhood home. Bergit died in 2011 and Edvard now looks after her house. This is a story of two very different lives, lived within a matter of yards of each other. Whilst the physical distance separating Edvard and Bergit may have been minimal, their emotional and lifestyle choices are so far apart. Through her photographs Høyland explores these choices, the different dreams and needs that the brother and sister sought to fulfill, whilst award winning Norwegian novelist and poet, Gaute Heivoll provides a short fictional piece inspired by the images. The collaboration is both absorbing and moving.

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