A lighthearted guide to indoor fun in the time of the pandemic
Embarking upon self-isolation at the outset of the Coronavirus pandemic, German artist Max Siedentopf (born 1991) turned his own home upside down and captured the results with his camera. He piled cans into sculptural towers, stitched together haute-couture clothes, crafted monsters and traps and invented crazy alternatives to toilet paper.
He also posted all of his actions on Instagram and invited followers around the world to copy his various mottos. This handy survival guide casts a fun, humorous light on the business of getting by while home alone—from “invent a new meal” to “make a painting using a toothbrush” and “balance all your beauty products.” The best pictures from the series, which now numbers more than 1,000 images, are collected here, offering an effective and fun way to combat boredom indoors.
Featured image is reproduced from 'Max Siedentopf: Home Alone, A Survival Guide.'
STATUS: Out of stock
Temporarily out of stock pending additional inventory.
NEW YORK Showroom by Appointment Only 75 Broad Street, Suite 630 New York NY 10004 Tel 212 627 1999
LOS ANGELES Showroom by Appointment Only
818 S. Broadway, Suite 700 Los Angeles, CA 90014 Tel. 323 969 8985
ARTBOOK LLC D.A.P. | Distributed Art Publishers, Inc.
All site content Copyright C 2000-2017 by Distributed Art Publishers, Inc. and the respective publishers, authors, artists. For reproduction permissions, contact the copyright holders.
The D.A.P. Catalog www.artbook.com
 
Distributed by D.A.P.
FORMAT: Pbk, 12 x 14 in. / 104 pgs / 210 color. LIST PRICE: U.S. $14.00 LIST PRICE: CANADA $20 ISBN: 9783775747974 PUBLISHER: Hatje Cantz AVAILABLE: 6/30/2020 DISTRIBUTION: D.A.P. RETAILER DISC: TRADE PUBLISHING STATUS: Active AVAILABILITY: Out of stock TERRITORY: NA LA
A lighthearted guide to indoor fun in the time of the pandemic
Published by Hatje Cantz. Edited by Nadine Barth.
Embarking upon self-isolation at the outset of the Coronavirus pandemic, German artist Max Siedentopf (born 1991) turned his own home upside down and captured the results with his camera. He piled cans into sculptural towers, stitched together haute-couture clothes, crafted monsters and traps and invented crazy alternatives to toilet paper.
He also posted all of his actions on Instagram and invited followers around the world to copy his various mottos. This handy survival guide casts a fun, humorous light on the business of getting by while home alone—from “invent a new meal” to “make a painting using a toothbrush” and “balance all your beauty products.” The best pictures from the series, which now numbers more than 1,000 images, are collected here, offering an effective and fun way to combat boredom indoors.