Art & the Printed Matter

Mimi Plumb
David Levinthal
Ryan McGinley
Peter Funch
Lee Friedlander
André Cepeda
Berenice Abbott
Cartsen Höller
Tanya Marcuse
Helmut Newton
Motoyuki Daifu
Daniel Buren
Jonas Wood
Alfred Stieglitz
Joel Sternfeld
Olivo Barbieri
Eirik Johnson
Roni Horn
Jim Goldberg
Marco Breuer
Luc Tuymans
Terri Weifenbach
Torbjørn Rødland
Anthony Hernandez
Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa
Gerhard Richter
Antoine D'Agata
Ron Jude
Olaf Nicolai
Christopher Bucklow
Daniel Arsham
Farhad Moshiri
Hiroshi Sugimoto
André Kertész
Yusuke Yamatani
Alex Prager
Trent Parke
José Pedro Cortes
Mishka Henner
Jason Fulford
Lewis Baltz
Elliott Erwitt
Greg Girard
Bill Brandt
Vera Lutter
Zanele Muholi
Tomás Saraceno
Paul Fusco
Nick Waplington
Miles Aldridge
Sohrab Hura
Gregory Crewdson
Laurenz Berges
Willy Ronis
Mona Kuhn
Carlo Valsecchi
John Gossage
Darren Almond
Marilyn Minter
Matthias Hoch
Misha de Ridder
William Eggleston
Cy Twombly
Jason Evans
Eiji Ohashi
Mark Power
Erik Kessels
Kourtney Roy
Stephane Couturier
Bill Jacobson
Damien Hirst
Vincent Delbrouck
Catherine Opie
Keisha Scarville
Miklos Gaal
Richard Hawkins
Xavier Veilhan
Vik Muniz
Richard Serra
Guanyu Xu
Walker Evans
Mårten Lange
Wout Berger
Eugene Atget
Jacques-Henri Lartigue
Peter Sutherland
Uta Barth
Jeff Wall
Ricardo Cases
Cheyney Thompson
JR
Christian Patterson
Josiah McElheny
Parisian apartment of an art collector

Building your own art collection or library of art books?

Art Advisory Services

You need advice getting started collecting photographs or art editions?
or some direction on expanding your artbooks library?
or maybe appraise some photographs you own?

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Staged Photography
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Staged Photography

The "staged photography movement" refers to the practice of intentionally constructing scenes for a photograph, becoming a recognized artistic genre in the 1980s, though its roots go back to the 19th century...

If the Walls Could Talk...
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If the Walls Could Talk...

Photography often brushes against memory, not just as a record of what was, but as a way of sensing what lingers, what has faded, and what remains unsaid. Nowhere is this felt more sharply than in photographs of interiors devoid of people.

Symbol Image for German Photography

German Photography

The Influencers

Germany has long been a crucible of innovation in the arts,and photography stands as one of its most influential and globally resonant disciplines. From post-war documentation to conceptual abstraction, German photographers have continuously redefined the medium. At the heart of this movement lies a constellation of artists whose unique perspectives and technical prowess have left a lasting imprint on contemporary visual culture.

Symbol image for Japanese Photobooks

Japanese Photobooks

Visual language

The photobook occupies a revered place in the world of Japanese photography, serving not just as a means of distribution but as a conceptual and aesthetic object in itself. Japanese photographers have long embraced the photobook format as a personal and often provocative medium, pushing the boundaries of narrative, abstraction, and physical design. From the intimate to the political, these books trace a powerful lineage of artistic innovation, where each photographer adds a distinctive voice to a shared visual language.

Symbol image for American Photobooks

American Photobooks

A mirror of culture and concepts

The American photobook occupies a unique and evolving space in contemporary art, functioning not merely as a vessel for photographs but as a conceptual art form in itself. It is an object of narrative, experimentation, and cultural commentary. From Robert Frank’s seminal "The Americans"to today's digitally printed zines and artist books, the photobook has offered artists a portable, democratic format for challenging dominant narratives and reshaping visual culture. American artists such as Ed Ruscha, Alec Soth, and Todd Hido have harnessed this form to explore geography, identity, and the poetics of everyday life, while others—like Wade Guyton and Christopher Wool—have used it to interrogate the materiality of image-making itself.

Art Advisory


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