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Book Review Echo Mask Photographs by Jonathan Levitt Reviewed by Blake Andrews The photographs in Echo Mask were made primarily in the Maritime Northeast between Newfoundland and Maine, and around the mangrove islands and hardwood hammocks of the subtropical Southeast.
https://www.photoeye.com/bookstore/citation.cfm?catalog=ZJ032
Echo Mask. By Jonathan Levitt.
https://www.photoeye.com/bookstore/citation.cfm?catalog=ZJ032
Echo Mask  
Photographs by Jonathan Levitt

Charcoal Press, Ohio, USA, 2019. In English. 96 pp., 9¼x12".

Jonathan Levitt’s new book, Echo Mask, opens with a brief flurry of charcoal skies. Such scenes will be familiar to anyone who's spent time along Levitt's native Maine coast, where weather windows can close quickly. Next comes the book’s basic framework: a grainy monochrome image across a two-page spread, followed by a small centered block of text.

The prose touches on natural phenomena, museum holdings, and the title—Echo Mask refers to ceremonial headgear worn by Northwestern natives—among other topics. At first, I took the passage to be a summary photo caption. But not so fast. The words aren’t literal, just odd. Dreamy. Poetic. “Great," responded Lenz when I told him I found the texts to be pure mystery. "The exact experience we hoped for! We really wanted the book to be something that gets stuck in your teeth. Something that nags at you and you can’t quite figure it out." Mission accomplished.

There are seven such breaks at regular intervals throughout the book, in which a two-page spread is followed by a text block numbered sequentially by Roman numerals. These words provide small verbal harbors where the mind might rest a moment—a brief refuge from the photos. Well, perhaps rest isn't the right word. They require some work, and even then I still found them impenetrable. But to their credit, these words operate in a part of the brain far removed from the photosensors. They are somewhat jarring, which I’m guessing is the intended effect.

Words aside, most of the book is photos. Levitt's images are concerned primarily with the natural world and its strange machinations. There are plants and animals shown in their habitats. Note, "animals" includes humans, which Levitt depicts with warm intimacy. Also rocks, fungi, water, mountains, coast, and other general components of earthbound existence. Levitt is a serious cook with a master’s in gastronomy, and he’s included pictures in that vein too: eggs, meat, fish, animal skin, and the most forlorn rustic kitchen I've seen in a while.

The photos bounce from subject to subject, mixing proximity, color palette, size, and aspect ratio in assorted form. A horizontal monochrome mountain landscape is followed by a small, vertical color photo of a fish in a jar. A foggy grey chasm is followed by what seems to be a colorfully mis-exposed mushroom. A snarling polar bear sits across the page from some strange runic script. Connections are tenuous. The reader is kept guessing.

Regardless of specific subject, Echo Mask circles back continually to its fundamental themes: life/death, natural cycles, rudimentary elements. "The best food is usually very simple," Levitt tells Juxtapoz. "…It's the same with photography. The best pictures are simple and timeless." His visual style is primordial and murky, with “some element of chaos,” as Levitt describes it. That said, the pictures feel exact. They’re clean, not messy, and teed up precisely on the page as smallish frames with wide white cushions.

The visual style of Echo Mask falls in line with books such as Maja Daniels Elf Dalia, Matthew Genitempo’s Jasper, Jenia Fridlyand’s Entrance To Our Valley, and (Levitt’s neighbor, geographically and stylistically) Gary Briechle’s Maine. Although these titles tend toward the tack sharp, they feel somehow fuzzy, with pictorialist leanings. Many are shot in the intermountain West, but, regardless of location, they tend to exude the unsettled sensibility of the frontier. Mood takes general precedence over reportage, and monochrome’s abstraction offers refuge from straight truth.

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Blake Andrews is a photographer based in Eugene, OR. He writes about photography at blakeandrews.blogspot.com.


photo-eye Gallery Behind the Image Kate Breakey on Tree Stories Alexandra Jo While the time and meticulous effort that goes into the creation of all of Kate Breakey's work is indeed captivating, her conceptualization behind each image is just as rich. This week, photo-eye is excited to share insight into Breakey's thought process.

Sheoak by Ocean, Kangaroo Island, South Australia, Hand-Colored Archival Pigment Print, 36x32" Image, 
Edition of 20, $2,030, Framed
When looking at Kate Breakey's process-based work, it's easy to get caught up with how each piece was made. While the meticulous effort that goes into the creation of Breakey's work is captivating, her conceptualization behind each image is just as rich. This week, photo-eye is excited to share Breakey's thought process behind all of the images in Tree Stories, our current exhibition of work from three different series, as well as the specific story behind Tree of Life, Mesquite, Full Moon Rising, Bahrain.

Kate Breakey, Eucalyptus Trees, Xmas Day, South Australia,
Archival Pigment ink 24k gold leaf on glass, 5 x 12 inches,
Edition of 20, $1375 Framed  
Tree Stories
I grew up in rural Australia with a lot of trees — big, old trees that I climbed and played in with my friends as a child. There was evidence that generations of children before us had been in these trees. There were carved initials and remnants of older tree houses and swing ropes. Those treetops were a fantasy world, a place where it was possible to make believe we were different creatures, where we could lie precariously on boughs, and feel them sway and groan in the wind, hear the wind in the leaves, and smell the sap. And it was familiar and comforting, a primal ancestral memory of being tree-dwellers perhaps. In trees we were invisible, but we could see everything — get a whole different perspective. My own house was strangely small from up there. We were also aware trees had stories and histories, and that the cycles of their lives — the seasons, the droughts, fires, floods, and storms — were all written in their rings. They also knew birds, bees, beetles, and earthworms, possums, and generations of people who rested or wrote poetry under them, or sketched or photographed them. As symbols of strength, endurance and wisdom in most cultures, trees have been the subjects of much art, including my own. Each tree has a story, and I have a story about each tree.



Kate Breakey, Tree of Life, Mesquite, Full Moon Rising, Bahrain, Hand-colored archival pigment print, 24 x 30 inches,
Edition of 20, $1730 Framed 

Tree of Life, Mesquite, Full Moon Rising, Bahrain.

Tree of Life is the official title of this tree. It is a 400-year-old Mesquite, with sprawling limbs, growing in the Arabian desert, near the city of Manama in Bahrain. It is on a hill on the site of a 500-year-old fort, now rubble. The tree is considered to be a miracle because no one understands what its water source is, and how it can still be alive at all. Some say, the tree is protected by the Babylonian god of water, and it is fabled to be on the site of the Garden of Eden. People bring water to pour at its base and pray. An armed guard now patrols its perimeter. I was in Bahrain with friends, and there was a full moon rising at twilight, so I suggested we go see the tree. I didn’t have a tripod, but it was lit by spotlights at its base. I waited, and the moon rose through its branches, and in that moment it was indeed miraculous.

All prices listed were current at the time this post was published.

For more information, and to purchase artworks, please contact photo-eye Gallery Staff at:
(505) 988-5152 x 202 or gallery@photoeye.com


• • •




Book Store Interview Lake Lahontan | Lake Bonneville Photographs by Michael Light Interviewed by Alexandra Jo Alexandra Jo sits down with Michael Light to discuss his fourth Radius book in his aerial series Some Dry Space: An Inhabited West journeys into the vast geological space and time of the Great Basin—the heart of a storied national "void" that is both actual and psychological, treasured as much for its tabula rasa possibilities as it is hated for its utter hostility to human needs.
https://www.photoeye.com/bookstore/citation.cfm?catalog=DT279
Lake Lahontan | Lake BonnevilleBy Michael Light.
https://www.photoeye.com/bookstore/citation.cfm?catalog=DT279
Lake Lahontan | Lake Bonneville
Photographs by Michael Light

Radius Books, 2019. 
72 pp., 39 illustrations, 10½x16".

Michael Light has the unique ability to think and see along a wide spectrum of concepts. Like the landscapes he aerially photographs while carefully piloting a small plane, his creative vision is vast and encompassing. The photographic work in Some Dry Space: An Inhabited West, his ongoing project about the environment of the American West, simultaneously interrogates the conceptual spaces between human presence and absence, beauty and terror, emptiness and lack-thereof, American culture’s power, and the dwarfing of that power in a monumental landscape. The work brings up issues of scale and transformation, revealing the “automatic writing” that human existence etches onto the face of our planet, which in turn points to other transitory marks that the history of life on earth has left behind.

Light’s photographs are lithe, shifting to examine relationships between order and chaos, appearance and erasure, and human kind’s presence in the world. While his eye for color and composition are easily legible in the images, Light’s keen sensitivity to objecthood manifests itself firmly in his photobook projects. His most recent publication through Radius Books, Lake Lahontan/Lake Bonneville, commands attention with a large physical footprint and a unique do-si-do reversed binding. The book’s striking color palette undulates through quiet greys, warm yellows, electric green-blues, and shocks of charcoal black, referencing an array of subjects and sparking the viewer’s imagination. Along with the strong versatility in the photographs of these two ancient lake basins, the tactile pleasure and substantiality of the book are part of what draws viewers into the complete experience of the project. The book is bound so that it must be turned over, handled, interacted with, for viewers to read all of the poetically curated text and see each image. The design elegantly separates and opposes the two bodies of work while creating a coherent conversation between them.

I recently had the pleasure of interviewing Light about Lake Lahontan/Lake Bonneville. He expands on the book’s relationship to the Some Dry Space: An Inhabited West project as a whole, his incredible and risky process for shooting the photographs, and his background as an artist and maker.



 
Lake Lahontan | Lake Bonneville. By Michael Light.


 Alexandra Jo: How did you get your start in photography?

Michael Light: I started making images in high school, as the proverbial “pencil-necked geek”—it was a way to exercise some power amidst my peers and some exigency in the New England forest landscape that I was trapped in for those four years. I ran the yearbook for a couple of years, which morphed later in my undergraduate days to editing the visual section of the college literary journal, and was always pulled to the outdoors, to what I’d call the “not-us,” to spaces and environments larger than myself and that of the culture that surrounded me. My father was a professor of painting at Rochester Institute of Technology and my mother’s first husband wound up being tenured in the photo department there—Minor White was around—and at graduation from high school I was presented with a used monorail 4x5, a Beseler enlarger, and a white Ford F-150 with no power steering and a “three on the tree.” It was DESTINY, and I got as far away from New England as I possibly could at every opportunity. I headed West permanently at the age of 22, a week after receiving my BA in American Studies. I’ve now been perched in the Bay Area for 33 years, a great place from which to explore the larger West.

AJ: How did you start making photo books?

Lake Lahontan | Lake Bonneville. By Michael Light.
ML: Books were around in a big way in my family—not only literarily but also in an antiquarian, fetish object sense—and I learned early on what red goatskin, endpaper marbling, and vellum were, and what they might mean. Books had an almost biblical authority in my world, and this goes back as far as I can remember. There were also some famous writers around where I grew up, some who were mentors, and I youthfully worshipped their ability to shape experience and create meaning out of the often senseless chaos of life. And of course, I wanted to be them, as much as I was intrinsically and already an image-maker. Ultimately and in retrospect, the photobook was the perfect melding for me of the two disciplines of writing and imaging, and I have always worked hard to imbue my books with a strong sense of what one might call “object-wonder,” which can slyly and in the best instances lead to “object-authority.” My first and most enduring education in photography was self-taught and through the photobook form, driven by a visceral hunger, beginning in maybe 1979 when I was a junior in high school. I inhaled every photobook I could thereafter. They shaped the way I think photographically, and at this point, I can’t really create a body of work without creating some sort of book. I can image freely, without thinking of the book form, but the only way I can edit and shape is through a book sequence.

AJ: Your website mentions that you’re focused on “the environment and how contemporary American culture relates to it.” This feels like a very important and timely topic to explore as an artist today. Can you talk a bit more about how this concept manifests itself in your work overall?

ML: Overall my career has been concerned with investigations of space, scale and place on the one hand, and human alteration of those things on the other. I am interested in the point where what we might call built and unbuilt worlds collide, and in the power relationships that ensue. Tool-bearing homo sapiens are very powerful beings—we don’t need to look far in the Anthropocene’s human park to find evidence of that—but there are also points and places and situations where that power is dwarfed. My work aims to look at the consequences and limitations of that human power carefully in the context of beauty and terror—the fundamentals of the classical landscape sublime—as well as attempt to channel and transcribe some of the power inherent in the many and almost infinite worlds that are not us. Arguably one could title all my work “What We Do.” The American part comes in because I’m a US citizen who studied the history and politics of that nation deeply early on, living in the American West, and one who prefers to work relatively close to home. All my work can be said to be an examination of Western space, whether literal or mythic, lunar or atomic. It’s also true that American power, being the most pervasive on the planet so far, does deserve an especially relentless look. The American lens happens to be my own, but I think my work extends beyond that space to examine larger human and environmental verities.

Lake Lahontan | Lake Bonneville. By Michael Light.

AJ: Additionally, can you speak more specifically about this concept in relation to the multi-volume Some Dry Space: An Inhabited West project that the Lake Lahontan/Lake Bonneville book is a part of?

ML: Some Dry Space: An Inhabited West is an effort to look at various aspects of how we live in that part of America that still offers a mythic—and to some degree, actual—promise of emptiness and the concurrent sense of possibility that attends it. The project is archetypal, rather than encyclopedic, and examines both settled and unsettled areas, deeply altered places as well as more pristine. I make large – 36” x 44” when open – handmade books in the studio, and at this point, there are 19 that relate to Some Dry Space. The three works that I’ve published with Radius Books previous to this year are based on some of the big books and touch on mining, Los Angeles and its hell-spawn, Las Vegas—space that is very heavily settled and altered. With the latest work and the most recent book it became, I felt it was time to venture more deeply into a more overtly empty territory, effectively to make something from “nothing.” Of course, a key premise of the larger project is that there is no emptiness, that we are at this point everywhere, always, and also that what we might consider from a human perspective to be a non-scape is actually bursting with myriad realities that we often overlook.

AJ: The photographs in this book specifically seem to create a dynamic push/pull sensation between the micro/macro in scale and perspective. What are you thinking about as far as perspective and scale go when you’re planning and creating these images?

Lake Lahontan | Lake Bonneville. By Michael Light.
ML: I’m piloting my 600 lb, 100 horsepower aircraft about 500 feet above the ground—carefully!—and trying to make images that convey the greatest sense of vastness and scale possible. The goal with this work was to venture as much as possible into a spatial and psychological unknown. Deep space, wholly open to interpretation, while still keeping just enough visual moorings to eventually be locatable in a landscape. I’m thinking about going as far as I possibly can into a world of actual and perceptual danger, and coming back alive. The method of obtaining these images is not for the faint-hearted. And yes, I am flying and imaging at the same time. They happen by having real skin in the game; no drone could make them.

AJ: When I first looked at the work, I was reminded of many different branches of visual expression from abstract expressionist painting to contemporary drawing practices. Do you think there is a relationship to drawing or painting here? How so or how not?

ML: Of course, and the relationship in the images is intentional. One of the things that’s most interesting to me, however, is not the references to art history, but the larger statement about humans themselves engaging in kind of automatic writing on the surface of the planet. Parts of the Bonneville imagery refer in my mind to the densest urban spaces: they evoke Times Square in New York, or the metastasizing residential valleys of outer L.A. And in that writing, where is the line between madness and coherency, between the grid and chaos? Are they one and the same on occasion? The Lahontan imagery revolves around the actual grid of Burning Man’s Black Rock City, an 80,000-strong conurbation that paradoxically is built and disassembled annually, but whose decades-deep palimpsest of earthly marks is erased by fierce annual Winter floods and storms. A lost Atlantis drawn, erased, and redrawn again and again.

Lake Lahontan | Lake Bonneville. By Michael Light.

AJ: I feel like transformation also plays a large role in these images. You’re transforming these vast, arid landscapes into images that evoke imagination and could reference so many things visually from computer chips to alien worlds to microscopic biology. At the same time, as a viewer, I become aware of human presence in the landscape with vehicle tracks, etc. How does the concept of transformation resonate with you?

ML: We are everywhere—and also not. I wanted these images to offer things yet unseen, to offer more than what the lens sees merely optically. There is a deliberate transformation of standard perception here. We drown in mimetic imagery; why make more unless it offers something heretofore unknown? I should say that these images, while not what the lens and the eye immediately sees optically, technically remain “whole”—I increase contrast and tonal separation in them after the fact, and the color palette accordingly becomes more extreme, but all colors were there in the image to begin with, and each remains an uncomposited photograph of a specific place. I think one of the most amazing things about art is that it posits that what we think to be a known world can actually be something else—that there is, in fact, no one “real world”—that, as the writer, Peter Matthiessen once said to me, “there are many worlds, all of them real.”

Lake Lahontan | Lake Bonneville. By Michael Light.

AJ: Can you elaborate on what drew you to these two sites, Lake Lahontan and Lake Bonneville, specifically?

ML: "Lake Lahontan" and "Lake Bonneville" are the historical names of the Pleistocene lakes that once covered to a depth of 900 feet almost all of Nevada and a great deal of Utah, 10,000 years ago. They also mark a lot of the Great Basin, which is that part of the West where all water drains inward and evaporates, rather than flowing to the sea—a great metaphor for a kind of landscape meditation as well as the place traditionally thought of as the most “empty” in America.

AJ: This book encompasses photographs of both sites, Lake Bonneville and Lake Lahontan, and the reversed do-si-do type design elegantly coheres the two bodies of work by keeping them separate but creating a legible relationship between them. It’s also pleasantly substantial as a physical object. How did you decide on the design for this project?

ML: Thank you. I decided carefully! The book is the 23rd edition published of my work. Key to the design of the book was establishing both a dyadic relationship between the two neighboring Pleistocene spaces, which have related but different tones in the imagery, and a profound sense of vertigo, where up is down and down is up and there is no beginning or end or back or front. I’ve noticed in book signings that people will often unwittingly look through the images upside down, which in this book—two books plural, actually—is an easy mistake to make.

Lake Lahontan | Lake Bonneville. By Michael Light.

AJ: The text in the book is rather poetic and seems just as gracefully designed and curated as the rest of the book. Where does the text come from and what was the idea behind selecting/designing it?

ML: There are three texts in the work: a rather poetic one by the writer and critic Leah Ollman, a boisterous and incantatory one by the poet and naturalist Charles Hood, and an expository one about the geology and history of the Great Basin by the writer William L. Fox. There is also a pull-out folded reproduction of a key Great Basin map published in 1849 by explorer John C. Fremont, which served as an inspiration to me. A strange and compelling line of (offensively and almost laughably colonialist) text arcs through the tabula rasa emptiness of the Basin . . . .

AJ: You’ve worked with Radius books before… what is it like to work with this publisher?

ML: Radius is great—David Chickey and I have now done four books together, all to the same trim size, part of a single inter-related series, and he and I are hand in glove when it comes to design decisions and together collaborate extremely well. He is all one could ask for in an editor/designer/publisher, in that he takes what an artist is doing and distills it into the best form possible, making it that much more potent and liberating it to be that much more itself.

AJ: What is the next step in the Some Dry Space: An Inhabited West project?

ML: Getting people to buy and review and enjoy the latest book! As for the next and perhaps final book in the published series, stay tuned.

Purchase the book

Lake Lahontan | Lake Bonneville. By Michael Light.


Books 2019 Favorite Photobooks — Final Day Today is the final day of photo-eye's Favorite Photobooks, all 78 of our photobook VIPs' selections are now available to view on our website.
https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/



Today is the final day of photo-eye's Favorite Photobooks, all 78 of our photobook VIPs' selections are now available to view on our website.

Check back daily to see a new group of favorite books!




Mark Power's Favorite

https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=Mark&Lastname=Power
Sleep Creek
Dylan Hausthor & Paul Guilmoth

"A beautiful little book from the excellent Athens-based Void, this was my most exciting find at Paris Photo. Devoid of text, the book appears to blend fact, fiction, and myth, with pictures consistently strange and often difficult to read. [...] It’s a brave publication, but one which (I’m sure) will continue to reveal itself over time."



Josef Chladek's Favorite

https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=Josef&Lastname=Chladek
Dein Kampf
Brad Feuerhelm

"Brilliant, from the first page to the last thanks (that goes to The Sisters of Mercy—how can anything be wrong with that?), shelved right on my Berlin-Olympus beside the masterworks of Michael Schmidt's Waffenruhe and John Gossage’s Stadt des Schwarz/Berlin in the Time of the Wall—it feels like a contemporary companion of those books."





Rixon Reed's Favorite

https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=Rixon&Lastname=Reed
Lake Lahontan | Lake Bonneville
Michael Light

"Michael Light's sumptuous book of abstractions, made from above the North American Great Basin, is brilliant in concept and execution. Here, the scars that are made on our earth's surface by humans act as a semi-permanent record of how we treat our planet."





Shane Lavalette's Favorite


https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=Shane&Lastname=Lavalette
American Origami
Andres Gonzalez

"American Origami presents an unusual and moving reflection on the complexity of a seemingly endless cycle of gun violence in America—a timely publication that is visually striking, poetic, and painful."






RVB Books' Favorite

https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=RVB&Lastname=Books
Richard Prince 1234/ Instagram Recordings
Richard Prince & Sébastien Girard

"I had already seen early dummies of it, but when I discovered the final version of the Instagram Recordings — 12 chronological books, each packaged in a unique record sleeve — two words came to mind: future classic!"






Christopher J Johnson's Favorite

https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=Christopher&Lastname=Johnson
Stages for Being
Ralph Eugene Meatyard

"Meatyard, an optometrist by trade, continues to show us that seeing is miracle, but seeing a photograph is the work of meditation."





  

Books 2019 Favorite Photobooks — Day Twelve We've asked internationally renowned experts and artists from the photobook world to choose just one book as their FAVORITE photobook of the year. Over the next several days we will be unveiling all of our photobook VIPs' favorites.
https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/



We've asked internationally renowned experts and artists from the photobook world to choose just one book as their FAVORITE photobook of the year. Over the next several days we will be unveiling all of our photobook VIPs' favorites.

Check back daily to see a new group of favorite books!




Michael Mack's Favorite

https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=Michael&Lastname=Mack
were it not for
Michael Ashkin

"Over the past year or more, the most consistently stunning and challenging books have come out of Amsterdam, through the publishing of ROMA and fw:books. I could have selected a number of books by each of these publishers as my favourite of the year but settled on Michael Ashkin’s were it not for".



Tim Carpenter's Favorite

https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=Tim&Lastname=Carpenter
I wish the world was even
Matteo Di Giovanni

"Back in July, I wrote about the remarkable photobook I wish the world was even by Matteo Di Giovanni for the photo-eye blog. I loved it then, and my appreciation has only deepened in the months since."





Miwa Susuda's Favorite

https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=Miwa&Lastname=Susuda
Entropy
Ari Marcopoulos

"Marcopoulos’ photos are pervasive serenity, an oasis in a frenetic urban landscape. His work is a reminder of hope against all odds—a reminder that we can connect, that we can attain fleeting serendipity and even love in the face of apparent futility."





Christian Patterson's Favorite


https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=Christian&Lastname=Patterson
Family Car Trouble
Gus Powell

"Family. Car. Trouble. Gus Powell’s masterful family photo novella. Beautiful, sad and bittersweet. Perfect. The Volvo cried, and I cried with it."






Rafal Milach's Favorite

https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=Rafal&Lastname=Milach
EVOKATIV
Libuše Jarcovjáková

"EVOKATIV is a manifesto of personal freedom put against the political context of communist Czechoslovakia. Libuše Jarcovjáková is a strong female voice liberating both the body and space from the oppressive look."





Karen Jenkins's Favorite

https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=Karen&Lastname=Jenkins
Taken From Memory
Sheron Rupp

"To pass muster on porch and pathway; to weave through lines of laundry, cats and cars; to wait expectantly on a fish or a flower; to trace Sheron Rupp’s thirty-plus year journey to find home in another’s backyard is a wonder worth pursuing."





  

Books 2019 Favorite Photobooks — Day Eleven We've asked internationally renowned experts and artists from the photobook world to choose just one book as their FAVORITE photobook of the year. Over the next several days we will be unveiling all of our photobook VIPs' favorites.
https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/



We've asked internationally renowned experts and artists from the photobook world to choose just one book as their FAVORITE photobook of the year. Over the next several days we will be unveiling all of our photobook VIPs' favorites.

Check back daily to see a new group of favorite books!




Alec Soth's Favorite

https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=Alec&Lastname=SothFamily Car Trouble
Gus Powell

"2019 was a banner year for photobooks. Dozens of publications impressed me with their creative horsepower. But the one that touched me the most, Gus Powell’s Family Car Trouble, is as modest, sturdy and lovable as the 1993 Volvo it features."



Mark Steinmetz's Favorite

https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=Mark&Lastname=Steinmetz
The Pillar
Stephen Gill

"The resulting images of birds (and one fox) are astonishing. Taken together, the photos evoke nature’s rhythms and the passage of time. The book is beautifully produced."





Nick Waplington's Favorite

https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=Nick&Lastname=Waplington
CTY
Antony Cairns

"Using outmoded digital cameras from the early days of their inception combined with an acute knowledge of cutting-edge printing techniques, Cairns brings us into a world that could only exist in the computer-driven landscape of today."





Dewi Lewis' Favorite


https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=Dewi&Lastname=Lewis
Deceitful Reverence
Igor Pisuk

"A personal and bravely intimate journey from addiction to rehab, Deceitful Reverence explores vulnerability and fragility in a way that is open and honest, expressing the depth of a struggle to regain a true sense of personal identity and a place in the world."






Andrew Fedynak's Favorite

https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=Andrew&Lastname=Fedynak
Sleep Creek
Dylan Hausthor & Paul Guilmoth

"In Sleep Creek, by Dylan Hausthor and Paul Guilmoth, we are taken on a journey through raw, unknown spaces of rural land — and of our minds."





Eamonn Doyle's Favorite

https://www.photoeye.com/best-books-2019/details.cfm?FirstName=Eamonn&Lastname=Doyle
Ex-Voto
Alys Tomlinson

"Beautifully shot on large format film, the stunning black and white prints were one of my highlights of the Rencontres d'Arles Festival this year where it also very deservedly won this year's discovery award."





  

photo-eye Gallery Common Threads Kate Breakey's Exploratory Process Alexandra Jo Breakey’s series of embroidered nests is distinct in the Tree Stories exhibition. However, it is the consistent exploration of materials and open approach to process in Breakey's practice that truly ties each individual work in the show to all the others.

Kate Breakey, Nest 9, Hand-embroidered archival pigment print on silk, 24 x 24 inches, Edition of 20, $2,290 Framed 

Most of the works in Tree Stories, photo-eye Gallery's current exhibition of works by Kate Breakey, are images of the same subject: trees. However, the exhibition actually features photographic works from three different bodies of Breakey’s work, each of which explores a different photographic process or technique. Her shimmering gold orotones feel extremely different than the smoky, soft aesthetic of her hand-colored archival pigment prints, which are divergent in aesthetic from her hand-embroidered prints on silk. Across the board, it not just consistency of subject matter, but the exploration of materials and open approach to process that truly ties each work in the show to all the others.

Kate Breakey, Nest 35, Hand-embroidered archival pigment print on silk
20 x 20 inches, Edition of 20, $2,030 Framed
Breakey’s series of embroidered nests is distinct in the exhibition. These archival pigment prints on silk, which the artist delicately, laboriously, embroiders by hand, have a dimensional objecthood that stands apart from the other works in the show. Viewers are drawn into the intricate, threaded details and soft tones of these works by cast shadows and the subtle but impactful shifts in surface texture. The silk panels are pinned inside shadow-box frames, which adds to the works’ legible sense of depth.

These works are intimate and visually gentle, but hold a strong presence in the gallery space. Breakey’s choice to make the nest images in a larger-than-life scale is impactful. This offers audiences a chance to inspect details in each nest, and highlights how each structure is unique to the needs and instincts of the creature that built it. These images aren’t pictures of trees like the works in the rest of the show, but rather, images of tree materials put to utilitarian use. The ingenuity and attention to detail in Breakey’s exploration of process acts as a bridge between each of the nests and the wider exhibition.

Kate Breakey, Nest 32, Hand-embroidered archival pigment print on silk, 24 x 24 inches, Edition of 20, $2,290 Framed

Tree Stories is on view at photo-eye Gallery through February 22nd, 2020

ABOUT THE ARTIST
Kate Breakey was born in Adelaide, Australia and received her MFA in photography from the University of Texas, Austin in 1991. Breakey is known for working in a multitude of photographic techniques, including large-scale, hand-colored archival pigment prints, gold-leaf backed orotones printed on glass, and hand-embroidered images printed on silk. Since 1981 her work has appeared in more than 75 solo exhibitions and more than 50 group exhibitions in the United States, France, Japan, Australia, China, and New Zealand.

All prices listed were current at the time this post was published.

For more information, and to purchase artworks, please contact photo-eye Gallery Staff at:
(505) 988-5152 x 202 or gallery@photoeye.com


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