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ALEX KATZ
Landscapes The publication focuses on the theme of landscape, for it is precisely this motif which continues all throughout his artistic career, from his early, still rather abstract paintings, through to the very latest landscape formations, which are up to seven meters long.
ISBN 978-3-86828-408-9
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AMETSUCHI
The title of Rinko Kawauchi’s latest work, Ametsuchi, is comprised of two Japanese characters meaning »heaven and earth,« and is taken from the title of one of the oldest pangrams in Japanese – a chant in which each character of the Japanese syllabary is used. Translated loosely as »Song of the Universe,« it offers a list that includes the heavens, earth, stars, and mountains.
ISBN 978-3-86828-396-9
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André Köhler
Odra_Rhein_Oder_Ren Leipzig photographer André Köhler accompanied with his camera two liter- ary boat trips Oder Rhein 2004 – Grenzen im Fluss (Flowing Borders) that were taken on the occasion of Poland’s entry into the EU.
ISBN 978-3-86828-262-7
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Andrea Künzig
İSTANBULUM The German photographer Andrea Künzig, who lives and works in Istanbul, allows us to accompany her on a very personal foray through the splendid city on the Bosporus.
ISBN 978-3-86828-183-5
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Andrea Künzig
Visions: Palestine An excellent photobook showing the everyday- and political life of the Palestinian people.
ISBN 978-3-936636-07-9
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Andrej Krementschouk
CHERNOBYL ZONE (I) Chernobyl – once just an old-fashioned town in the Ukraine, 100 kilometers from Kiev – and today synonymous with the biggest nuclear disaster in human history. April 2011 marks the 25th anniversary of the accident that took hundreds of lives and forced thousands of people living in the surrounding towns and villages to leave their homeland.
ISBN 978-3-86828-200-9
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Andrej Krementschouk
CHERNOBYL ZONE (II) Since 2008 photographer Andrej Krementschouk took several trips to Chernobyl, venturing into the restricted area around the reactor. While "Zone Chernobyl (I)" shows pictures he took of the rural landscape, this volume presents his photographs of the deserted urban zone.
ISBN 978-3-86828-210-8
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Andrej Krementschouk
COME BURY ME On the heels of his prizewinning book No Direction Home (a 2010 German Photo Book Award winner), photographer Andrej Krementschouk (*1973 in Gorky) once again tells in his new book a moving story about homeland and homelessness, roots and identity.
ISBN 978-3-86828-120-0
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Andrej Krementschouk
NO DIRECTION HOME Andrej Krementschouk portrays his Russian homeland where he is not at home anymore. In haunting images he asks the ever-pertinent question of what is remembered and what is lost, seeking evidence of emotional rootedness and cultural identity:
ISBN 978-3-86828-056-2
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Art Machines Machine Art
In general we presume that artists make art, but what happens when machines produce art? Do artists then become engineers?
ISBN 978-3-939583-40-0
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