Workers from KwaNdebele catch buses in the early morning, some as early as 2:45 am, in order to be at their workplaces in Pretoria by 7:00. This title takes you on their bone-jarring journeys through the night, which is a metaphor for their arduous struggle toward freedom itself.
The snapshot is a part of our visual culture, many photographs have been taken millions of times, with just slight variations, as the identity of the people in a family portrait. This title includes such snaps, images imbued with a sense of ease and freedom.
Chuck Close immediately liked the idea of a book without words. As a child, his severe dyslexia stood in the way of reading, making images all the more important. This book is a self-portrait that emerges out of the printing process, one plate and one color at a time.
Features the photographs that depict the colours, textures and people that characterise Delhi a magenta sari, an infant walking down a rust-coloured road, and a bright blue plastic tarpaulin, creating a portrait of the city that is sensitive without being self-indulgent.
A photographic journey from the author's hometown in the outskirts of Bari in southern Italy, that takes us to Mexico City, Cairo, Ankara, Anatolia, Sicily, Tunisia, and as far as Mesopotamia.
Juergen Teller has taken photographs of company employees, his uncle and his uncle's collection of hunting... Læs mere
This work is about the phenomena of appearance and disappearance. The book shows 36 head-shots of a clown. If mutability of appearance is integral to the phenomenon of the cloud - since dissolution or erasure is inevitable - the converse is proposed for the clown.