March 2025

  • Dona Ann McAdams: Black Box: A Photographic Memoir

    Dona Ann McAdams: Black Box: A Photographic Memoir

    Black Box, a memoir by award-winning American photographer Dona Ann McAdams, combines fifty years of black and white photography with the photographer’s own short lyric texts she calls “ditties.” The book brings together McAdams’ striking historical images with personal reflections that read like prose-poems.

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  • Mar Sáez: Terza Vita: Lido di Ostia Roma

    Mar Sáez: Terza Vita: Lido di Ostia Roma

    This enchanting book delves into the rebirth of interpersonal relationships among adolescents after a two-year compulsory break. Mar Sáez photographs the reappearing residents, and, above all, the yearning young lovers, in sensual, almost dancing attitudes.

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  • Ringel Goslinga: Aluk To Dolo

    Ringel Goslinga: Aluk To Dolo

    Aluk To Dolo shows how a family history became intertwined with the colonial history of the former Dutch East Indies. The story is set in Central Celebes (now Sulawesi), Indonesia, the home of the Toraja people, where the grandfather of Ringel Goslinga was appointed missionary doctor.

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  • Henry Roy: Impossible Island

    Henry Roy: Impossible Island

    This is the first monograph exploring forty years of innovative Franco-Haitian artist Henry Roy’s sublime photographic practice. Impossible Island brings together photography, text, and video to immerse readers in Roy’s world of interconnected dreams, where time, place, and memory flow together.

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  • Thomas Nolf: As Real As it Gets

    Thomas Nolf: As Real As it Gets

    A photography project by Thomas Nolf exploring humanity’s need for escape through aviation culture. Between 2020 and 2024, Nolf traveled the globe, engaging with flight simulator enthusiasts, aircraft spotters, and visiting the world’s largest model airport, Miniatur Wunderland in Hamburg.

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  • Fusako Kodama: 1960-1980

    Fusako Kodama: 1960-1980

    Between restlessness and lightness, Fusako Kodama portrays a certain effervescence of modern Japan. In 1960-80, she captures the atmosphere of places, cities, and villages inhabited by animated beings.

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  • Emily Nkanga: Unyọñ Ufọk

    Emily Nkanga: Unyọñ Ufọk

    Unyọñ Ufọk explores grief, identity, and home. Through analog photographs shot on Mamiya RZ 67 and Olympus OM2, Emily Nkanga captures fleeting moments of everyday life in her hometown of Akwa Ibom, Nigeria.

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