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Featured in the Guggenheim's 2015 landmark Photo-Poetics exhibition, New York-based artist Leslie Hewitt (born 1977) is one of the most revered artists working between photography and sculpture. Collaboration has been a central part of Hewitt's art, including projects with William Cordova and Matt Keegan, and her ongoing work with cinematographer Bradford Young exploring the Menil Collection archive of civil rights-era photographs. That cinematic rumination on historicity and the relationship of the archive to memory, minimalism, lived experience and time, sets an exemplary precedent for this first monograph surveying Hewitt's oeuvre. Edited by Cay Sophie Rabinowitz with texts by Nana Adusei-Poka and others, and designed by Garrick Gott, with color reproductions and in-depth critical essays, this book offers rare insights into the artist's extensive personal archive of images, concepts and ideas.
Glen Rubsamen's latest book is an extension of his new body of photographic works. It revolves around the Rhynchophorus ferrugineus, better known as the Red Palm Weevil--an insect with Asiatic origins that has moved quickly westward over the last century, aided by technology and globalism. The weevil's arrival in Southern Europe has devastated palm trees around the Mediterranean, a development Rubsamen describes as a case of "globalization eating colonialism," as many of the affected palms were planted in the last century for touristic and political reasons. Rubsamen depicts a process by which romantic elements in the landscape change meaning as things disappear from the mix; it is an investigation of a subtractive aesthetic event. In addition to the photographs and collage endpapers designed by the artist, the book contains an explanatory text by Stille, fiction by Licht and an interview by Soyez-Petithomme. The book is blind stamped with limp cloth binding.
Writings and photography by Tom McDonough, Stephanie Snyder, Louis Jaffe and Horatiu Sava in the latest OSMOSThe latest issue of OSMOS features Stefan Gronert's essay exploring Thomas Struth's family portraits; Cay Sophie Rabinowitz on OSMOS artist-in-residence Kevin Claiborne; Leila Grothe on Cynthia Daignault's paintings reflecting on American life; Chilean artist Felipe Mujica in conversation with Marcos Agudelo; Christian Rattemeyer on Adam Simon's paintings; Tom McDonough on David Schoerner's birdhouse series; Stephanie Snyder on Fabiola Menchelli in Eye of the Beholder; Horatiu Sava's story of Romanian sheep herders; Louis Jaffe's use of digital mapping to explore Californian wildfires; and Reportage by Guannan Li on fishermen in the Portugese town of Ovar.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.
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