Richard EhrlichRenderings of human anatomy predate the Renaissance. In an age without rigid distinctions between art and science, such images often served both disciplines. | Andy SummersDesirer Walks the Streets presents a dark stream of black and white photographs that are culled from Andy Summers's life as a traveling musician. |
Daido Moriyama"It was 34 years ago, back in 1972, that I came out with the self-published photo journal 'Kiroku.' At the time, I was busy with all sorts of work for magazines..." - Daido Moriyama | Toshiko OkanoueSurreal in appearance, Okanoue’s collages are perhaps most remarkable for what they represent: a young Japanese woman’s perception of the Western way of life, as seen through her rearrangement of images clipped from such magazines as Life and Vogue |
Melanie PullenMelanie Pullen’s long-awaited first monograph, High Fashion Crime Scenes, presents her breathtakingly beautiful works based on vintage crime scene images, first-hand accounts, and documents Pullen mined from the files of the lapd. | Jan BanningJan Banning's "Bureaucratics" offers a comparative study of the culture and symbols of state civil administrations – the institutions through which citizens are generally confronted with the state. |
Joseph Mills"Mills is a good enough picture maker to intrigue us and yet he is determined to keep us on the edge of unknowing." - Anne Tucker. | Julius ShulmanJulius Shulman, born in Brooklyn in 1910, has for decades been recognized as the pre-eminent photographer of mid-century architecture. |
Julius ShulmanThe photographs reproduced in this book represent some of Julius Shulman’s earliest steps as a photographer. Dating from the early to mid 1930s, these are his personal snapshots, intimate keepsakes of family and friends. | Lee FriedlanderThis series of photographs by the inestimable Lee Friedlander will certainly delight with its beauty; it may also surprise with its warmth, and its sense of immortality. |
Lee FriedlanderWitness Number 6 provides a portrait – in 157 photographs by Lee Friedlander, and accompanying essay by Maria Friedlander – of the sculptor Raoul Hague. | Margaret Bourke-WhiteIn the March 22, 1937 issue of LIFE, there was a cover story entitled “Parachutes.” Margaret Bourke-White’s pictures told the story of the Irving Air Chute Company in Buffalo, New York, the world’s largest manufacturer of parachutes. |
Mark SteinmetzMark Steinmetz completes his powerful and moving trilogy, “South”, with Greater Atlanta. Photographing in Atlanta and its outlying regions, Steinmetz provides his testimony on contemporary American civilization | Paul CaponigroIn the 1960s, following a move to New York City, Paul Caponigro focused his attention on still lifes. Paul Caponigro’s photographs are included in most history of photography texts and contemporary art museums. |
Daido MoriyamaDaido Moriyama is without question one of Japan’s most important contemporary photographers and it is not surprising that this memoir, first published twenty-one years ago, is regarded as a classic in photographic literature. | Michael Kenna, Bianca RossiniBritish-born photographer Michael Kenna and Brazilian-born author Bianca Rossini worked together to create a book of photographs and poems entitled “Love in black and white. |
Michael KennaMichael Kenna's intimate, exquisitely crafted black-and-white photographs reflect a sense of refinement, respect for history, and thorough originality. We are pleased to present our sixteenth calendar featuring his work. | Michael KennaThe Nazraeli Press edition of "Michael Kenna: A Twenty Year Retrospective" features a larger format than previous editions, with high fidelity tritones printed 1:1 from original prints. |