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New writings from Stephanie Snyder, Kate Fowle, Geoffrey Batchen and more on photo cultures past and presentThe latest issue of OSMOS features a cover by Catherine DeLattre; an essay by contributing editor Tom McDonough on artist Alfredo Jaar; Stephanie Synder on photographer Liza Ryan; Christian Rattemeyer on Zagreb-based conceptual artist David Maljkovic; an essay by Kate Fowle on Sherrill Roland; a portfolio by artist Roscoe Thicke; Maria Ines Plaza Lazo on Berlin-based performance and video artist Leila Hekmat; an essay by writer Geoffrey Batchen on A New Power: Photography and Britain 1800-1850 at the Bodleian Library, Oxford; a feature by Christian Oldham on renowned avant-garde Ikebana master Kosen Ohtsubo; and a text by Tim Walsh on the previous issue's cover artist James Barth, whose self-portraits use avatars as a means to explore their transgendered identity and representation. Through painting and 3D modeling, Barth's works combine photography, painting, science fiction, cinematic language and poetic gestures.
Essays and meditations on iPhone photography, artist residencies, mortality and more from the acclaimed New England photographer and educatorA memoir and meditation on the history of photography from one of New England's most respected photographers, Rose Marasco (born 1948), this volume features short personal writings on topics ranging from artist residencies and iPhone photography to the early death of her father and includes selections from several bodies of work across Marasco's long career. Lucy Lippard's foreword situates Marasco as a key feminist voice among practitioners of vernacular photography. Marasco is now a widely exhibited photographer with works in many museum collections, who has also spent decades as a beloved and highly regarded teacher of photography. Her keen eye and generous voice offer an important perspective on how photography can shape a lifetime.
Early 1900s street photography from London, documentation of Covid structures and more in the new OSMOSThe latest issue of OSMOS Magazine features a cover by James Barth; an essay by contributing editor Tom McDonough; John Menick on Camel Collective; Christian Rattemeyer on Santiago de Paoli; a story on Patrick Killoran's documentation of Covid structures; Edward Lindley Sambourne's early 1900s London street photography; and a very special feature with Aboriginal Australian conceptual artist and activist Richard Bell about his work for Documenta 15. Founder and editor of OSMOS Magazine Cay Sophie Rabinowitz describes the publication as "an art magazine about the use and abuse of photography." OSMOS Magazine is the only periodical publication in the market combining curatorial and art-historical perspectives with portfolios, photo narratives and reportage.
Writings on, and work by, Mariah Garnett, Diane Severin Nguyen and Margarete Jakschik plus an essay on the many uses of the word "pictures"Founder and editor of Osmos Magazine Cay Sophie Rabinowitz (formerly of Parkett and Fantom) describes the publication as "an art magazine about the use and abuse of photography," explains . The magazine is divided into thematic sections--some traditional, and others more idiosyncratic. This 20th issue looks backward and forward. Kelly Sidley's essay surveys the wide-ranging use of the term "pictures" in 1977, from Mapplethorpe's simultaneous shows entitled "Pictures"--one of "portraits" at Holly Solomon and the other of "erotic pictures" at the Kitchen--to Douglas Crimp's renowned Pictures Generation exhibition at Artists Space. The "Still Moving Still" section focuses on Los Angeles-based Mariah Garnett; a portfolio on the work of Diane Severin Nguyen; and a selection of images by Margarete Jakschik, who was the cover artist for the previous issue. Alongside longtime contributing editors Tom McDonough and Drew Sawyer, new contributors such as River Bullock make their debut.
Essays on Ellie Ga, Joanna Piotrowska, Walter Pfeiffer, Steve Reinke, Anna Papier and more, in the latest issue of OsmosAs founder and editor Cay Sophie Rabinowitz (formerly of Parkett and Fantom) explains, Osmos Magazine is "an art magazine about the use and abuse of photography." The magazine is divided into thematic sections--some traditional, and others more idiosyncratic. Osmos Magazine issue 19 features Oliver Chanarin in conversation with Rafal Milach about the Magnum photographer's book In Nearly Every Rose ..., plus essays by Tom McDonough on Ellie Ga; Lucy Gallun on Joanna Piotrowska; Walter Pfeiffer introduced by Swiss Institute curator Daniel Merritt; Kenta Murakami on Steve Reinke's The Hundred Videos; Anna Papier on the Dutch photographer Bart Julius Peters; Christian Rattemeyer on Levan Mindiashvili; Drew Sawyer on Erin Jane Nelson; Ksenia Nouril on Rafael Soldi; and Leon Dish Becker's reportage, ESL Political Clickbait, on memes designed by YouTubers infiltrating and promoting paranoia.
Writings by Michael Asselin and Stephanie Cristello, an essay on Joanna Piotrowska, recent works by Onyedika Chuke and Neil Winokur, and more, in the latest issue of OsmosOSMOS Magazine is "an art magazine about the use and abuse of photography," explains founder and editor Cay Sophie Rabinowitz (formerly of Parkett and Fantom). The magazine is divided into thematic sections--some traditional, such as "Portfolio," "Stories" and "Reportage"--and others more idiosyncratic, such as "Eye of the Beholder," where gallerists discuss the talents they showcase; and "Means to an End," on the side effects of nonartistic image production. This issue of OSMOS Magazine features recent works by New York-based Onyedika Chuke; an essay on the Polish artist Joanna Piotrowska; a reportage by Michael Asselin; Chicago-based art critic Stephanie Cristello on Kay Rosen's videos from the 1990s; and a portfolio by New York-based photographer Neil Winokur.
Internationally renowned artist and self-described "still-life photographer" Eileen Quinlan (born 1972) uses medium- and large-format analog cameras to create abstract photographs, working the film with steel wool or lengthy chemical processing. Among the subjects of her photographs are smoke, mirrors, Mylar, colored lights and other photographs. Featuring color reproductions and in-depth critical essays by Mark Godfrey and Tom McDonough, this book surveys Quinlan's use of Polaroid film from 2006 to 2017. Initially used as a tool for proofing, Quinlan's Polaroids can be seen as sketches, moments in which crucial formal and conceptual questions were explored and worked out. Moving through her extensive archive, one can find the origins of almost every larger body of work, as well as many ideas that remained in the repository, evidencing the artist's desire to push beyond the constraints of her apparatus.
OSMOS Magazine is "an art magazine about the use and abuse of photography," explains founder and editor Cay Sophie Rabinowitz (formerly of Parkett and Fantom). This issue features Marilyn Minter, artist Jill Magid on her ongoing engagement with the work of Alexander Calder, an essay by contributing editor Tom McDonough on Anne Collier, Drew Sawyer on Elle Pérez, Russian Ghanaian photographer Liz Johnson Artur's "beautiful moments of everyday black life around the world" and Dale Harding's murals created using a stencil technique practiced by the artist's ancestors: the Bidjara, Ghungalu and Garingbal peoples of Central Queensland, Australia. Cover by Corentin Grossmann.
OSMOS Magazine is "an art magazine about the use and abuse of photography," explains founder and editor Cay Sophie Rabinowitz (formerly of Parkett and Fantom). The magazine is divided into thematic sections--some traditional, such as "Portfolio," "Stories" and "Reportage"--and others more idiosyncratic, such as "Eye of the Beholder," where gallerists discuss the talents they showcase; and "Means to an End," on the side effects of non-artistic image production. This issue features an essay by Tom McDonough on Raymond Boisjoly, a portfolio of images by Mishka Henner as introduced by Kenneth Goldsmith, an interview with David Ogburn by Leslie Hewitt, Isolde Brielmaier on artists engaging with migration and borders, a reportage from North Korea by Matthew Connors and a reflection on America's most successful girl group, The Supremes, as performers who made themselves for and in broadcast media.
Osmos magazine is "an art magazine about the use and abuse of photography," explains founder and editor Cay Sophie Rabinowitz (formerly of Parkett and Fantom).The magazine is divided into thematic sections--some traditional, such as "Portfolio," "Stories" and "Reportage"--and others more idiosyncratic, such as "Eye of the Beholder," where gallerists discuss the talents they showcase; and "Means to an End," on the side effects of nonartistic image production. This issue features a portfolio of work by the conceptual photographer Bing Wright, curator Drew Sawyer on Carmen Winant, an intimate look at the work of Lari Pittman and an essay by Peter Weibel on interface technology in the films of Kathryn Bigelow.
OSMOS Magazine is "an art magazine about the use and abuse of photography," explains founder and editor Cay Sophie Rabinowitz (formerly of Parkett and Fantom). The magazine is divided into thematic sections--some traditional, such as "Portfolio," "Stories" and "Reportage"--and others more idiosyncratic, such as "Eye of the Beholder," where gallerists discuss the talents they showcase; and "Means to an End," on the side effects of non-artistic image production. This issue includes a feature by contributing editor Tom McDonough on photographer Eileen Quinlan, reportage by photographer Alex Welsh, an essay by Jeffrey Kirkwood describing his research on the innovative Swiss artist and filmmaker Klaus Lutz, and an examination of Paris-based Dove Allouche by curator Drew Sawyer.
OSMOS Magazine is "an art magazine about the use and abuse of photography," explains founder and editor Cay Sophie Rabinowitz (formerly of Parkett and Fantom). The magazine is divided into thematic sections--some traditional, such as "Portfolio," "Stories" and "Reportage"--and others more idiosyncratic, such as "Eye of the Beholder," where gallerists discuss the talents they showcase; and "Means to an End," on the side effects of non-artistic image production. This issue, OSMOS Magazine #12, with a stunning cover by conceptual photographer Bing Wright, features an essay by Peter Weibel on interface technology in the film work of Kathryn Bigelow, a portfolio on Peter Funch, Simon Leung's survey of recent work by Lincoln Tobier, and rare documentation about Ursula Block's infamous record store and gallery, gelbe MUSIK, founded in 1981 as the Berlin outlet for experimental sound art and music.
Osmos Magazine is "an art magazine about the use and abuse of photography," explains founder and editor Cay Sophie Rabinowitz (formerly of Parkett and Fantom). The magazine is divided into thematic sections--some traditional, such as "Portfolio," "Stories" and "Reportage"-- and others more idiosyncratic, such as "Eye of the Beholder," where gallerists discuss the talents they showcase; and "Means to an End," on the side effects of non-artistic image production. This issue features Sarah Meister on Jan Groover, Helga Pakasaar on the Uno Langmann Family Collection's photographic archive of turn-of-the-century British Columbia, AA Bronson, Josef Bauer, Janice Guy, Honza Zamojski, Eva Kot'átková, Brian DePinto, and Anna & Bernhardt Blume, all enclosed in Alex Welsh's poignant cover, depicting residents of Fergusson, MO.
Osmos Magazine is "an art magazine about the use and abuse of photography," explains founder and editor Cay Sophie Rabinowitz (formerly of Parkett and Fantom). The magazine is divided into thematic sections--some traditional, such as "Portfolio," "Stories" and "Reportage"--and others more idiosyncratic, such as "Eye of the Beholder," where gallerists discuss the talents they showcase; and "Means to an End," about the side effects of nonartistic image production. This issue features Tom McDonough on Joy Episalla, a conversation with Gillian Wearing about her 20 years of making Polaroid self-portraits, an essay by Pavel VanDát on Jan Svoboda, Meleko Mokgosi, David Hart, Robert Rauschenberg, and a special vintage cover by Co Rentmeester.
After cofounding Fantom in 2009 in Milan and New York, Cay Sophie Rabinowitz is continuing the endeavor by launching her magazine with the new name of Osmos. Osmos magazine focuses its editorial practice on texts and image series by practitioners and professionals investigating the uses and abuses of photography. Alongside more conventional genres, such as Essay, Interview, and Portfolio, Osmos frames some of its content in sectors, such as "Collections," about curatorial and archival practice; "Means to an End," about the side effects of non-artistic image production; and "Picture Perfect," where photography is implicit in the production of the featured work, but is not always the resulting final medium. One outstanding feature is the critical approach to the cover, which acknowledges the delayed effect of image capture or so-called "after image," by featuring an artist or work to be discussed in the following issue. With a radical blend of arresting images, print quality, and distinctive design, Osmos magazine is the most recognized publication in the market fostering contemporary perspectives in photography as the medium crossing all creative industries and practices--art, design, fashion and propaganda, aiming at the core of our imagination.
Scenes from the frontlines of American feminism and civil rights, from the archives of folk singer, filmmaker and photographer Bev GrantThis is the first monograph on Brooklyn-based photographer Bev Grant's (born 1942) extensive archive of photographs made from 1968 to 1972, when she was on the frontlines as a feminist and political activist. Grant began taking photographs as part of her participation in demonstrations with the Women's Movement, such as No More Miss America in Atlantic City in 1968 and The Jeannette Rankin Brigade in Washington, DC, in 1968. As a member of the film collective New York Newsreel, she gained access to the Young Lords Party, the Black Panther Party and the Poor People's Campaign. "When I sat in on a workshop given by Students for a Democratic Society at Princeton University in 1967, I had no idea of the impact it would have on the rest of my life. The workshop topic was women's liberation. It was an awakening, a dawn of consciousness that gave me a framework to understand my life and a path that I continue to follow."
A geometric motif pursued through collage by a celebrated Croatian protagonist of concrete artCroatian artist Julije Knifer (1924-2004) is recognized as one of the most prominent artists related to concrete art after 1945, as well as a founding member of the 1960s art collective known as the Gorgona Group. Over a career spanning five decades, Knifer developed a singularly restrained practice focusing on the variation of a single visual motif: the meander. Knifer's meanders have been interpreted differently depending on the period in which they appeared: first in the context of geometric abstraction and neo-constructivism of the "New Tendencies" of the 1960s. Today, they are more often understood as a gesture of resistance, with their asceticism and interest in the absurdism of anti-art and the neo avant-garde. This book focuses on a group of collages, produced in the late 1950s and early 1960s, that illustrates the development of the meander motif at a pivotal moment in Knifer's career.
Rare drawings by Fumio Yoshimura, paintings by Erik Schmidt and more, in the latest OSMOSFounder and editor of OSMOS Magazine Cay Sophie Rabinowitz (formerly of Parkett and Fantom) describes the publication as "an art magazine about the use and abuse of photography." The magazine is divided into thematic sections--some traditional, and others more idiosyncratic. OSMOS Magazine issue 21 features an essay about the rare series of pen-and-ink drawings that Fumio Yoshimura created for a legal defense fundraiser he and Kate Millet organized when Peggy Dobbins was arrested at the 1968 Miss America pageant protest. The reportage is by Chris Jordan. Also included is a portfolio of recent paintings by Berlin-based artist Erik Schmidt; Drew Sawyer writes on Oren Pinhassi; and the cover features a detail from Camel Collective's 2018 exhibition titled Grip.
The Osmos brand was initiated 15 years ago with a project space in Berlin, and since then, with Osmos Exhibitions, Osmos Books, Osmos Magazine and the Osmos Preserve Collection, it has developed into a fully integrated concept for curatorial and editorial activities. After cofounding Fantom in 2009 in Milan and New York, Cay Sophie Rabinowitz is continuing the editorial endeavor with Osmos Magazine, a journal of texts and image series by practitioners and professionals investigating the uses and abuses of photography. One outstanding feature is the critical approach to the cover, which acknowledges the delayed effect of image capture or so-called "after image," by featuring an artist or work to be discussed in the following issue. With a blend of arresting images, print quality and distinctive design, Osmos Magazine is among the most recognized photo journals.
Osmos Magazine is "an art magazine about the use and abuse of photography," explains founder and editor Cay Sophie Rabinowitz (formerly of Parkett and Fantom). Nourishing contemporary perspectives in photography and the visual arts, and delivering a unique view with content divided into recurring thematic sections--some traditional, such as "Portfolio," "Stories" and "Reportage"--and others more idiosyncratic, such as "Eye of the Beholder," where gallerists discuss the talents they showcase; and "Means to an End," about the side effects of nonartistic image production. Contributors to this issue include Michael St. John, Stuart Ringholt, Azadeh Akhlaghi and Sam Samore, with a vintage Bruce Mozert image on the cover.
Nilbar Güres (born 1977) is a Turkish multidisciplinary artist whose work explores the politics and construction of female identity in relation to geography and religion. The launch of her first monograph, Nilbar Güres: Who Is the Subject?, published by OSMOS Books, coincides with an intimate first exhibition in New York, entitled, Pink Is the New Black at OSMOS Address including photography, collage, video and drawing. In the series Unknown Sports, Güres depicts women in their private spaces transforming them, as the artist remarks: "high jumpers instead of window cleaners, sprinters instead of shop keepers, shot-putting instead of holding our siblings in their arms." The artist leads the viewer to reevaluate and reconsider the conventional relationship between women, their domestic environments and public space, sexual politics and the perception of Muslim women in Europe.
The Osmos brand was initiated 15 years ago with a project space in Berlin and has since developed into a fully integrated concept for curatorial and editorial activities. Currently, the Osmos address is located at 50 East 1st Street, in a Manhattan East Village storefront that was once a saloon frequented by Emma Goldman and other radicals. Former Parkett editor and Fantom cofounder Cay Sophie Rabinowitz launched Osmos Magazine as a journal of texts and image series created by practitioners and professionals investigating the uses and abuses of photography. One outstanding feature is a critical approach to the cover, which acknowledges the delayed effect of image capture or so-called "after image," by featuring an artist or work to be discussed in the following issue. With a radical blend of arresting images, print quality and distinctive design, Osmos Magazine is the most recognized publication in the market fostering contemporary perspectives in photography as the medium crossing all creative industries and practices-art, design, fashion and even advertising-at the core of our imagination. Current and forthcoming issues feature Erica Baum, Carolyn Drake, Richard Hamilton, Keizo Kitajima, Duane Michals, Elio Montinari, Anna Ostoya, Humphrey Spender and Christopher Williams, among others.
The Osmos brand was initiated 15 years ago with a project space in Berlin and has since developed into a fully integrated concept for curatorial and editorial activities. Currently, the Osmos address is located at 50 East 1st Street, in a Manhattan East Village storefront that was once a saloon frequented by Emma Goldman and other radicals. Former Parkett editor and Fantom cofounder Cay Sophie Rabinowitz launched Osmos Magazine as a journal of texts and image series created by practitioners and professionals investigating the uses and abuses of photography. One outstanding feature is a critical approach to the cover, which acknowledges the delayed effect of image capture or so-called "after image," by featuring an artist or work to be discussed in the following issue. With a radical blend of arresting images, print quality and distinctive design, Osmos Magazine is the most recognized publication in the market fostering contemporary perspectives in photography as the medium crossing all creative industries and practices-art, design, fashion and even advertising-at the core of our imagination. Current and forthcoming issues feature Erica Baum, Carolyn Drake, Richard Hamilton, Keizo Kitajima, Duane Michals, Elio Montinari, Anna Ostoya, Humphrey Spender and Christopher Williams, among others.
After cofounding Fantom in 2009 in Milan and New York, Cay Sophie Rabinowitz is continuing the endeavor by launching her magazine with the new name of Osmos. Osmos magazine focuses its editorial practice on texts and image series by practitioners and professionals investigating the uses and abuses of photography. Alongside more conventional genres, such as Essay, Interview, and Portfolio, Osmos frames some of its content in sectors, such as "Collections," about curatorial and archival practice; "Means to an End," about the side effects of non-artistic image production; and "Picture Perfect," where photography is implicit in the production of the featured work, but is not always the resulting final medium. One outstanding feature is the critical approach to the cover, which acknowledges the delayed effect of image capture or so-called "after image," by featuring an artist or work to be discussed in the following issue. With a radical blend of arresting images, print quality, and distinctive design, Osmos magazine is the most recognized publication in the market fostering contemporary perspectives in photography as the medium crossing all creative industries and practices--art, design, fashion and propaganda, aiming at the core of our imagination.
Osmos is "an art magazine about the use and abuse of photography," explains founder and editor Cay Sophie Rabinowitz (formerly of Parkett and Fantom). It is divided into recurring thematic sections--some traditional, such as "Portfolio," "Stories" and "Reportage"--and others more idiosyncratic, such as "Eye of the Beholder," where gallerists discuss the talents they showcase; and "Means to an End," about the side effects of nonartistic image production. This issue includes Tom McDonough's essay on Share Corsaut, Anton Stankowski's constructivist photographs and Prem Krishnamurthy's survey of Klaus Wittkugel's poster designs. The cover by Blaise Cepis announces his feature forthcoming in the following issue.
Osmos Magazine is "an art magazine about the use and abuse of photography," explains founder and editor Cay Sophie Rabinowitz (formerly of Parkett and Fantom). Nourishing contemporary perspectives in photography and the visual arts, the issue delivers a unique view with content divided into recurring thematic sections--some traditional, such as "Portfolio," "Stories" and "Reportage"--and others more idiosyncratic, such as "Eye of the Beholder," where gallerists discuss the talents they showcase; and "Means to an End," about the side effects of nonartistic image production.
Wardell Milan (born 1978) earned a BFA in photography and painting in 2001 at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and his MFA at Yale University in 2004. Right out of school in 2005 Milan emerged and was included in institutional exhibitions such as Greater New York at P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center and Frequency at The Studio Museum in Harlem. Milan has continued to challenge conventions of medium and message in his deeply personal and prolific work, which has been exhibited internationally.His work has been collected by The Studio Museum in Harlem; Denver Art Museum; Museum of Modern Art, New York; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Hessel Museum of Art, Bard College, and Art Institute of Chicago. Milan is represented by David Nolan Gallery in New York. This is Milan's first monograph covering the breadth of his studio and exhibition practice over the course of the past decade and leading into the next.
OSMOS Magazine is "an art magazine about the use and abuse of photography," explains its founder and editor. The magazine is divided into thematic sections--some traditional, such as "Portfolio," "Stories" and "Reportage"--and others more idiosyncratic, such as "Eye of the Beholder," where gallerists discuss the talents they showcase; and "Means to an End," on the side effects of nonartistic image production.roduction.
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