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ARTBOOK BLOGEventsStore NewsMuseum Stores of the MonthNew Title ReleasesStaff PicksImage GalleryBooks in the MediaExcerpts & EssaysArtbook InterviewsEx LibrisAt First Sight2025 Gift GuidesFeatured Image ArchiveEvents ArchiveDATE 2/1/2026 Black History Month Reading, 2026DATE 2/1/2026 Join Artbook | D.A.P. at Shoppe Object New York, February 2026DATE 1/25/2026 Stunning 'Graciela Iturbide: Heliotropo 37' is Back in Stock!DATE 1/22/2026 The groundbreaking films of Bong Joon HoDATE 1/22/2026 ICP presents Audrey Sands on 'Lisette Model: The Jazz Pictures'DATE 1/21/2026 Guggenheim Museum presents 'The Future of the Art World' author András Szántó in conversation with Mariët Westermann, Agnieszka Kurant and Souleymane Bachir DiagneDATE 1/19/2026 Black Photojournalism, 1945 to 1984DATE 1/19/2026 Rizzoli Bookstore presents Toto Bergamo Rossi, Diane Von Furstenberg and Charles Miers on 'The Gardens of Venice'DATE 1/18/2026 Artbook at MoMA PS1 presents Paul M. Farber and Sue Mobley launching 'Monument Lab: Re:Generation'DATE 1/17/2026 Artbook at Hauser & Wirth Los Angeles Bookstore presents Peter Tomka on 'Double Player'DATE 1/14/2026 Printed Matter, Inc. presents Pedro Bernstein and Courtney Smith on "Commentary on 'Approximations to the Object'"DATE 1/13/2026 Join us at the Winter Atlanta Gift & Home Market 2026DATE 1/12/2026 Pan-African possibility in 'Ideas of Africa' | IMAGE GALLERY![]() DATE 1/25/2026 Stunning 'Graciela Iturbide: Heliotropo 37' is Back in Stock!Just in time for two New York City shows (at Throckmorton Fine Art and Ruiz-Healy), and closely following the ICP’s recent retrospective, Graciela Iturbide: Heliotropo 37 is back in stock from Fondation Cartier pour l'art contemporain in Paris. Featuring a tipped-on cover image and smyth-sewn exposed binding, this luxurious volume presents the influential Mexican photographer’s most iconic black-and-white works alongside previously unpublished photographs and a series of specially-commissioned color photographs. “Photography is not the truth,” Iturbide says in the published interview with Fabienne Bradu. “The photographer interprets reality, he builds his own reality according to what he knows and his emotions. It’s sometimes complicated because it is a slightly schizophrenic phenomenon. Without the camera, you see the world one way, and with it, another way; through this little window, you compose, you dream reality, as if the camera allowed you to synthetize what you are and what you’ve learned about the place. Then, you create your own image, you interpret. The same thing happens to the photographer and the writer alike: it’s impossible to capture life’s truths.”![]() DATE 1/22/2026 The groundbreaking films of Bong Joon HoIn honor of the 2026 Oscar nominations, announced today, we are featuring a few spreads from Bong Joon Ho: Director's Inspiration—a recently released staff favorite, published by DelMonico Books and the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures. Featuring stills and materials from Okja (2017), Parasite (2019) and Mickey 17 (2025), these spreads only hint at the treasures within, gathered from the director’s personal archive and elucidated upon by Bong himself. “The absurdity of Korean society in itself excites me cinematically,” he writes. “It’s bewildering. When you depict it cinematically, it may look like comedy at first, but it’s actually the most realistic portrayal.” Further along, he is quoted, “My films generally seem to have three components: fear, anxiety and a sense of humor.… At least when we laugh, there’s a feeling that we’re overcoming some kind of horror.”![]() DATE 1/19/2026 Black Photojournalism, 1945 to 1984Taken circa 1973, Ming Smith’s America Seen Through Stars and Stripes, New York City, NY is reproduced from Black Photojournalism, the catalog to the landmark exhibition on view through Monday, January 19—Martin Luther King Jr. Day—at the Carnegie Museum of Art. Spanning from 1945 through 1984, this powerful 400-page compendium features work by 57 Black photographers, both well known (like Smith, Kwame Brathwaite and Gordon Parks) and overlooked (until now). “One of the most persistently powerful means of resistance that Black photographers have employed is to simply show us as we are,” Deborah Willis writes, “in our full humanity as families, workers, friends, lovers, artists and leaders. These photographers were on the frontlines, focusing their cameras on both the beautiful and the most painful moments in Black neighborhoods and communities…” |