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ARTBOOK BLOGEventsStore NewsMuseum Stores of the MonthNew Title ReleasesStaff PicksImage GalleryBooks in the MediaExcerpts & EssaysArtbook InterviewsEx LibrisAt First SightThe Artbook 2024 Gift GuidesArtbook Featured Image ArchiveArtbook D.A.P. Events ArchiveDATE 6/25/2025 Rizzoli presents Anderson Zaca with Thom (Panzi) Hansen for the NYC launch of 'Fire Island Invasion: A Day of Independence'DATE 6/22/2025 Artbook at MoMA PS1 Bookstore presents Dawoud Bey, Michelle Kuo and Joseph Logan on 'Jack Whitten: The Messenger'DATE 6/21/2025 ICP Photobook Club presents Anderson Zaca on 'Fire Island Invasion'DATE 6/20/2025 Attention photobook collectors, ‘Masahisa Fukase: Sasuke’ is Back in Stock!DATE 6/15/2025 Gasoline and Magic for Father's Day, 2025DATE 6/13/2025 In Nydia Blas' 'Love, You Came from Greatness,' the title says it allDATE 6/12/2025 'Gordon Parks: Segregation Story' is Back in Stock!DATE 6/9/2025 Four decades of previously unpublished work by Bruce DavidsonDATE 6/8/2025 Artbook at MoMA PS1 Bookstore presents J. Hoberman and Melissa Rachleff Burtt on 'Everything is Now'DATE 6/7/2025 Artbook at MoMA PS1 Bookstore presents Jeanette Spicer launching 'To the Ends of the Earth'DATE 6/5/2025 A love letter from Robert FrankDATE 6/2/2025 Exact Change launches Chris Marker's 'Immemory: Gutenberg Version'DATE 6/1/2025 Inspiration for now in 'Gran Fury: Art Is Not Enough' | IMAGE GALLERY![]() DATE 6/20/2025 Attention photobook collectors, ‘Masahisa Fukase: Sasuke’ is Back in Stock!Whether you’re a connoisseur of post-war Japanese photography or a die-hard cat lover, Masahisa Fukase: Sasuke is a book for life. Featuring tipped-on front and back cover images and 115 gorgeously printed duotone 1970s and 80s photographs of renowned photographer Masahisa Fukase’s cats Sasuke and Momoe jumping, sleeping, biting, hiding, escaping, playing, plotting, climbing, staring and especially yawning, this highly collectible photobook is infused with fascination. Featured photograph is of Sasuke as a kitten.![]() DATE 6/13/2025 In Nydia Blas' 'Love, You Came from Greatness,' the title says it allNydia Blas’ extraordinary new photobook lives up to its name. Published by Image Text Ithaca Press, Love, You Came from Greatness is the rising Atlanta-based photographer, educator and community organizer’s first major monograph. Born in Ithaca, New York, for this project Blas returned to her hometown to explore her past and present roots, going back more than a century. This quietly profound artist’s book blends new and archival photographs to produce a meaningful portrait over generations. “It is so important to keep saying that there is power in looking, and that your viewpoint is really important,” Blas is quoted. “And that what you have to say is really important.” Her dedication at the beginning of the book? “To love, for being the only thing that can save us.” The ingenious production of the book is also worth noting. Perfect-bound with silkscreen on gold paper and cloth-wrapped boards, it is all and only its own. Featured here, “Ithaca, New York, 2013. Rosario Williams, my daughter.”![]() DATE 6/12/2025 'Gordon Parks: Segregation Story' is Back in Stock!Untitled, Shady Grove, Alabama (1956) is reproduced from Gordon Parks: Segregation Story—one of the great photography books of the twentieth century and perhaps Parks’ photographic masterpiece—recently expanded to include 30 previously unpublished photographs and a new essay by artist Dawoud Bey, among other special features. “In picture after picture,” Bey writes, we see that “deliberate choices of tool, material and sensibility lend the Black Southern presence, often under siege, a sense of lives fully and expressively lived. We see Black subjects and spaces that are rendered with all of the qualities of expressivity that the medium is capable of in the hands of one seeking to use it as not only an information-gathering tool, and as a ‘weapon against all the things I dislike about America,’ as Parks once stated, but also as a transformative tool capable of reshaping the experience of the world, and the Southern Black peoples who lived in it, into photographs that are the equal of those made by others whose works are considered formative to the medium’s expressive potential.” |