Keiran Perry – Smoke Filled Mirror

Review by Gerhard Clausing • For many of us the circus is a special experience full of magic. Some of us have at times felt a longing to be part of such a group of itinerant individuals that create illusions and bring special feats into what for most of us was the rather humdrum existence... Continue Reading →

Mark Cohen – Tall Socks

Review by Hans Hickerson · A time, a place, and a point of view all meet in a photograph. The time and place can be obvious, but the point of view part can get complicated, as it involves technical, artistic, and personal considerations that are in turn themselves the product of times and places. The... Continue Reading →

Alan Gignoux – Russian Rustbelt

Review by Douglas Stockdale • If we compare the planet with a communal apartment, we occupy the direst room. - Aleksei Yablokov, Environmental Advisor to Boris Yeltsin The Russian Urals is the subject of Alan Gignoux’s recent artist-photobook, Russian Rustbelt, documenting the Ural industrial region during a residency with the National Centre for Contemporary Art in Yekaterinburg in... Continue Reading →

Six PhotoBook Journal Reviews Featured in Thinking About Photography

We are pleased that six reviews dealing with photography and our relationship with our environment are featured as a part of Ann Mitchell’s Showcase, THINKING ABOUT PHOTOGRAPHY, just published: https://www.thinkingaboutphotography.com/photobook-environment "Whether they journey to the world’s last truly wild places - or the wild spaces found outside their door, all these projects celebrate and honor... Continue Reading →

Zach Callahan – Exhaust

Review by Hans Hickerson · Looking at Zach Callahan’s photobook Exhaust, the three words that occurred to me were simple, focused, and convincing. Let me explain the simple part first. There are 36 color photographs, one to a page spread.  Ten or so are portraits where the subject is engaging the photographer directly, and in... Continue Reading →

Jordanna Kalman – Index 2014-2024

Review by Brian Arnold · “Know yourself not your role, it’s hellishly hard.”                                                Shere Hite When Shere Hite applied for a doctoral program at Columbia University, she wanted to study with acclaimed scholar Jacques Barzun. She was inspired by the elder scholar’s approach to history and was eager to learn from him. Unfortunately,... Continue Reading →

Wouter Vanhees – Against the Tide

Review by Hans Hickerson · Photobooks never cease to surprise me. The book is a versatile medium that can become so many things. Belgian photographer Wouter Vanhees’ Against the Tide goes down its own path, and the best way I can describe it is to say that it reads like a film-noir-inspired storyboard for a... Continue Reading →

Michele Molinari – where I go

Review by Lee Halvorsen •  The physical form of the book is art and brings a tactile dimension to Michele’s visual story. The cover is dark green, heavy paper die cut with five circles of different sizes. The circles in the cover create a pinhole effect on the gray print of the next page’s introduction,... Continue Reading →

Tod Lippy – Private

Review by Hans Hickerson · Photography is mostly about visual editing. What does the photographer notice and photograph? What do they include in the photograph? What do they leave out? It is a mental art and it involves cultivation of the mind’s eye. Anyone can learn it. Did you notice something that no one else... Continue Reading →

Rian Dundon: Protest City

Review by Hans Hickerson · Having reviewed Rian Dundon’s recent photobook Passenger, I was curious to see his other books. I managed to get my hands on Changsha (2012, 2017) documenting his years in China, in black and white, full of movement, and trending dark and impressionistic, but this review is about another of Dundon’s... Continue Reading →

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