Ken Schles - Invisible City brazilSteidl 2016 For a decade, Ken Schles watched the passing of time from his Lower East Side neighborhood. His camera fixed the instances of his observations, and these moments became the foundation of his invisible city. Friends and architecture come under the scrutiny of his lens and, when sorted and viewed in the pages of this book, a remarkable achievement of personal vision emerges. Twenty five years later, Invisible City still has the ability to
meditating on the space in-between the big chapters in life
and whether pictures mirror or modify the world around them
Hamelin selected exemplary works by more than twenty photographers
Jonathan Everts is Professor of Human Geography at Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg
The resulting images within this publication is a distinctively ambiguous record of a moment
encompassing contemplations of motherhood and sexual politics
“Japan has a long and rich tradition of reciprocal gift giving
and I was told my bed had once belonged to Jane Fonda before she became Barbarella
which Corinne co-organized in the late 1970s and early 1980s
In this second volume
to make intelligible to us what we already know
Ghirri maps the Apulian territory via the traces left by its inhabitants and visitors in images flooded with the distinctive light of Southern Italy – the bright sun and its eloquent shadows