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BOOK INFO Hardcover, 11 X 8.5 In. / 216 Pages / 120 Color ISBN 9780988983168 List Price: $49.95 “Bull City is pretty much like lazing out on the porch of a summer’s night and meditating to your favorite ball team.”, - The New York Times, July 10, 2014“...captures not only the atmosphere at the games and in the stadium but also the complexities of being a minor-league baseball player.”, - The New Yorker, August 13, 2014“A rich photo book interspersed with smart, poignant essays about the game’s rhythm, its injustice, and its occasional grace.”, - Mother Jones, August 31, 2014Edited by Sam Stephenson Text by Howard L. Craft, Adam Sobsey, and Emma D. Miller  Around a season of minor league baseball, Bull City Summer: A Season at the Ballpark brings together a team of artists and documentarians to find stories and images on the field and behind the scenes, presenting a microcosm of contemporary America engaged in a favorite pastime. The Durham Bulls are one of the most popular and successful minor league baseball teams in the country, with more players being sent to the Majors than any other minor league team. To diversify the documentation of the 2013 season, guest artists Alex Harris, Frank Hunter, Kate Joyce, Elizabeth Matheson, Leah Sobsey, Alec Soth, Hank Willis Thomas and Hiroshi Watanabe were invited to photograph the team in Durham. "The opportunity to photograph spring baseball in North Carolina was a no-brainer," Soth says. "The pacing of baseball arouses a kind of leisurely attentiveness that is analogous to photographic seeing. You look and look and then every once in a while, snap, you get a hit." To visit the book website, go here.  View Details
Book Details: Trade ClothISBN-13: 9781942084877112 pages; 60 Color Photographs9 x 9  inches$45 US; $58.99 CAN "This is one family and their stories documented by a photographer who also happened to be a mother; yet one of photography's great gifts as a medium is that by providing a glimpse of someone else's narrative, the viewer is in essence borrowing bits and pieces of someone else's story to remind and springboard into parts of one's own narrative buried away and suddenly unearthed to the light of day" -  FotoNordtrum"Glauber's process in and of itself also contributes to the thematic element of time that courses through her work. By consistently chronicling moments over decades, the photographs become markers of what has passed, while also unfolding a kind of tomorrow that exists beyond the frame of the images." - Art DailyAlso featured in:L’Oeil de la Photographie, Budapest Fhoto Awards, Square Mag, Photoeye Blog, and Lenscratch.Photographs by Carole GlauberContributions by Elinor Carucci, Carole Glauber, Ben Glauber, and Sam Glauber-Zimra For thirty years photo-historian Carole Glauber photographed her sons with a with a 1950s Kodak Brownie Hawkeye camera. The resulting catalogue of images is as rich in color and warmth as it is dreamily faded from the past. Accompanied by an essay by acclaimed photographer Elinor Carucci, this monograph is testament to a mother’s love and time’s relentless melt.Carole Glauber is one of few photographers who is also a published photo-historian. Her photographs have appeared in exhibitions worldwide and she has received numerous awards for her photography and photographic researchPhotographer Elinor Carucci is famed for her intimate documentation of her family. She has published four monographs of her work and been exhibited in many solo and group exhibitions worldwide. View Details
BOOK INFO Trade Cloth, 10 X 10 In. / 128 Pages / 80 Color   ISBN 9781942084174 List Price: $45.00 "Sobsey’s work will remind you of the continual cycle of life and death...", - Musee Magazine, June 16, 2016"...her book tells a story about America’s natural history at a time when climate change and funding cuts call the future of the our indigenous species and wild spaces into question.", - Slate, September 16, 2016Photographs by Leah Sobsey Contributions by John Fitzpatrick and Xandra Eden Leah Sobsey works at the intersection of nineteenth-century photographic processes and twenty-first century digital technology. Sobsey photographs bird skins, bleached bones, clipped ferns, and tattered shoes, which she unearths from the dark drawers of national park museum collections. Plucked from their original context, she illuminates them with sun and light, giving them new definition. The subject matter of each series she creates is dictated by her discoveries, bridging past to present, honoring both the specimens she works with and the medium of photography.Sobsey's project is particularly timely during this centennial year of the National Park Service, and as museum collections find themselves in a state of crisis due to diminishing funding and support. Her focus on the parks is a way of preserving these fragile specimens that represent American history. This body of work sheds light on the importance and significance of the collections and their impact on science, history, the humanities, and the hundreds of thousands of visitors who leave their footprints on our national parks. View Details