Review by Hans Hickerson · In Passenger photographer Rian Dundon offers a master class in high-impact mayhem as he assembles an edgy, take-no-prisoners, in-your-face collection of visual facts that riffs on people, places, forms, and feelings, including a generous serving of spleen. Dundon is a passenger both literally and figuratively. He takes us with him... Continue Reading →
Sean and Tennbo Lotman – Puking Rainbows Past and Future
Review by Rudy Vega · Puking Rainbows, Past and Future is a captivating collaborative project by Sean Lotman and his son Tennbo, blending the boundaries between photobook and artist book. Encased in a cardboard slipcover adorned with Sharpie doodles and Instax prints—featuring individual portraits of the duo on the front and back—each copy is a... Continue Reading →
Debe Arlook and Eric T. Kunsman – Both Sides of the Table: Photography Portfolio Reviews Do’s and Don’ts
Review by Hans Hickerson · If you have never been to a portfolio review and are curious, Both Sides of the Table: Photography Portfolio Do's and Don'ts will be your go-to resource for perspectives and information. It is chock full of useful ideas and advice. The book is organized into three main parts. Reviewees are... Continue Reading →
Richard Zybert – Notebook on Time
Review by Hans Hickerson · Good things come in small packages. Grenades come in small packages too, and you can compare Richard Zybert’s 1981 photobook Notebook on Time to a small explosive charge. Notebook on Time is the story of Zybert coming to terms with his dysfunctional family and in particular with the legacy of... Continue Reading →
Dona Ann McAdams – Black Box
Review by Lee Halvorsen · The Black Box book is multimedia art…the book itself, the images, and the text. In the Afterword, Joanna Howard writes, “Black Box marries personal memoir with artistic retrospective of such a rich career.” The style of the book, the intimacy of the images, and the reality of the storyteller’s words... Continue Reading →
Ulf Lundin – Pictures of a Family
Review by Rudy Vega · Ulf Lundin’s Pictures of a Family first premiered as an exhibition in 1997. Fast forward to 2024, and Pictures of a Family is realized as a photo book. Consisting of 124 pages, of which 66 are photographs (64 color and 2 black and white), it’s an interesting look at photography... Continue Reading →
Daniel Chatard – Niemandsland
Review by Matt Schneider · If you have a car accident and you’re seriously injured – your left leg is broken, your right arm, nose broken, head broken, who knows what – then they put you in intensive care and everyone can see that you’re in a real mess. But if one day you break... Continue Reading →
Lewis Baltz – Nevada
Review by Hans Hickerson · A zine before there were zines, Lewis Baltz’ Nevada is also a print portfolio of the book’s 15 photographs. It was published in 1978 by Baltz’ gallery, Castelli Graphics, and was presumably intended as a marketing tool for the 600 8” X 10” prints that Baltz produced for the project... Continue Reading →
Harry Gruyaert – Homeland
Review by Melanie Chapman · In this social media saturated era we live in, it seems impossible to escape the vertical visual plague that is filter-enhanced influencers posing and pouting for selfies. Thus, it is a genuinely wonder-filled experience to be in the presence of another fine publication of Belgian photographer Harry Gruyaert’s sublime images.... Continue Reading →
Duane Michals – A Visit With Magritte
Review by Hans Hickerson ∙ No, A Visit With Magritte has not been re-released. It was last published in 2010 by Steidl and my copy is the Matrix edition from 1981. I wanted to review it because I wondered if other photobook fans are aware of it and because it was such a revelation to... Continue Reading →