Robert Frank. Ben James, Welsh Miner. 1951
seen from China
seen from Argentina

seen from Malaysia
seen from Portugal

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from China

seen from T1

seen from Germany

seen from Germany

seen from Russia
seen from China

seen from Netherlands
seen from T1
seen from Australia
seen from Yemen
seen from Türkiye
Robert Frank. Ben James, Welsh Miner. 1951
Richard Serra: Forged Steel, Texts by Richard Serra and Richard Shiff, Designed by McCall Associates, David Zwirner Books, New York, NY / Steidl, Göttingen, 2016 [Saint-Martin Bookshop, Bruxelles-Brussel. Art: © Richard Serra / ARS, New York]
Christoph Niemann | Steidl
Damien Hirst completed a decade long project to photograph every pharmacy in the Greater London area, both exterior facade and the chemist/pharmacist behind counter (1,856 chemists). The resulting book project, published by Steidl, is multi-volume (10), limited edition (750) and expensive (the catalog announced it at 2,500 euros, but the price increased, you can pre-order from Barnes and Noble for 4,400 USD). This is a photography blog, but I’m told Hirst has related art projects on the subject of pharmacies and pharmaceuticals.
New in the library © Peter Solarz
William Eggleston, The Outlands by Steidl
Other worldly color by the Master and his printer. My jaw is still on the floor.
In the late 1970s and early 1980s Joachim Brohm explored the edges of the Ruhr area where landscape and man-made structures meet and oftentimes people spend their leisure time. From an elevated standpoint Brohm documented landscapes and how people used it and moved in it. Taking up the approach of the New Topographics Brohm captured what Heinz Liesbrock calls the „Topographies of Anonymity“, moments suspended in time showing people and objects in seemingly everyday situations. But what he puts on film is far from accidental: his well-composed landscape views in their restrained coloring document the parallel of man and nature in a landscape that is neither urban nor entirely rural. With it comes a nobility of the ordinary that even today, some 40 years after these photographs were shot, is fascinating and wonderfully compiled in the present volume: “Joachim Brohm - Ruhr”, published by Steidl Verlag in 2007. It reproduces about fifty of Brohm’s photographs from all over the Ruhr area ranging from wintery skating scenes reminiscent of Pieter Brueghel paintings to rowers at Lake Baldeney in Essen. The series is preceded by a very informative introduction by Heinz Liesbrock who breaks down the many influences and references present in Brohm’s work but also underscores the photographer’s audacity to use color film in times when black and white was still the standard. A great read and one of my all-time favorite photographic works.
David Lynch por Nadav Kander
Milestone Monday
September 11
On this Milestone Monday, September 11, our minds and hearts wander to New York City and the stirring photography of American photographer Jerry Spagnoli (b. 1956). For those of us with memories of witnessing the attacks on the Twin Towers, our immediate reaction to Spagnoli’s photos may be to assume the worst. However, these photos taken between May and September 2012 mark an unexpected and pure New York experience fabricated by Spagnoli in Times Square.
In his book Regard, Spagnoli documents the faces of people transfixed on an enormous electronic billboard above Times Square. The billboard was programmed to periodically display live imagery of the crowd below it. What we see in the almost 500 faces captured in Regard are people encountering the billboard, looking for and finding themselves projected upon it. Spagnoli is best known for his work with the daguerreotype photographic process and is included in several major American art museums. At the heart of his photography, and prevalent in Regard, is an unearthing of his subjects' points of view. Regard was published in 2018 by Steidl and printed in Göttingen, Germany. UWM Special Collections holds a first edition.
View posts of September 11s past.
View other Milestone Monday posts.
-- Jenna, Special Collections Graduate Intern