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DATE 5/19/2026

Rizzoli Bookstore presents Pieter Henket and Justin Gaspar in conversation for the launch of 'Birds of Mexico City'

DATE 5/2/2026

Join Artbook | D.A.P. at CONTACT Photobook Fair, Toronto

DATE 4/24/2026

Lost City Books presents Yumna Al-Arashi and Farrah Skeiky on 'Aisha'

DATE 4/20/2026

Mrs. Dalloway's Bookstore presents Jane Fulton Alt, Susan Page Tillett and James Baraz on 'Still Life'

DATE 4/20/2026

Rizzoli Bookstore presents Chris Wiley, Nan Goldin, and Robert Swope on 'Michel Hurst: Órale'

DATE 4/19/2026

Morbid Anatomy presents 'Divine Color' author Laura Weinstein on 'Gods in Living Color: Hindu Devotional Lithographs and the Birth of Modern Indian Visual Culture'

DATE 4/18/2026

Artbook @ MoMA PS1 Bookstore presents a Zine-Making Workshop with Lauren Simkin Berke

DATE 4/17/2026

Watershed moments in Australian Aboriginal modernism

DATE 4/17/2026

Spoonbill Books presents 'Aisha' author Yumna Al-Arashi in conversation with Céline Semaan

DATE 4/16/2026

'The Stars We Do Not See: Australian Indigenous Art'—alive and in the present

DATE 4/14/2026

The essential companion to MoMA's monumental 'Marcel Duchamp'

DATE 4/11/2026

Artbook at Hauser & Wirth Los Angeles Bookstore presents Eve Wood and Shana Nys Dambrot on 'Diane Arbus Goes Shopping'

DATE 4/11/2026

A long lost archive documenting life at the Chelsea Hotel, 1969–71


IMAGE GALLERY

“Chloe” (1993),
JACK TEEHAN | DATE 4/5/2026

For Catherine Opie, "Without representation, there is no visibility"

With a distinctly empathetic gaze, Catherine Opie’s Portraits series (1993–7) captures the vibrancy and humanity of her Queer community. Inspired by sixteenth-century painter Hans Holbein the Younger, Opie constructs a royal family of her friends to challenge normative views of gender and sexuality. Sitters are depicted frontally against a solid background. For Opie, the visual language of courtly portraiture offers a rhetoric of liberation: “There was an equality to [Holbein’s] paintings—they weren’t demigod portraits, they were just incredibly detailed and real.” It is testament to Opie’s eye for nuance and the trust she builds with her sitters that she brings out such psychological complexity. Opie's photography redefines portraiture, probing the complex questions of who we are, how we present ourselves and why representation matters. Portraiture has always been about “being seen”—and a collaboration between sitter and portraitist to this end—but Opie has re-evaluated it as inclusive, intimate and reciprocal. “Chloe” (1993) is reproduced from Catherine Opie: To Be Seen, published to accompany the eponymous exhibition on view at the National Portrait Gallery, London, through May 31, 2026. The publication features more than 100 color images and a tactile quarter-bound cover, designed in close consultation with the artist.

Catherine Opie: To Be Seen

Catherine Opie: To Be Seen

National Portrait Gallery
Hbk, 9 x 11.25 in. / 192 pgs / 103 color / 21 b&w.

$49.95  free shipping





Happy New Year!

DATE 1/1/2026

Happy New Year!

Happy New Year!

DATE 1/1/2026

Happy New Year!