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Over 150 previously unseen images by photographer Elliott Erwitt will be published for thefirst time in Found, Not Lost. Spanning more than sixty years, the photographs inthe book, often taken during lulls or breaks between assignments in his prolific career, havebeen selected, edited and sequenced by Erwitt himself.
The Shipping Forecast, originally published in 1996, is Mark Power's illustration of the UK's Shipping Forecast, broadcast four times a day on BBC Radio 4. Beyond its useful and (at times life-saving)use to mariners it is also listened to by millions of people who tune in across the UK.
This long-term project, by South African photographer Alice Mann, explores the unique sport of drum majorettes. The images depict the aspirational subculture surrounding all-female teams of drum majorettes affectionately known as 'Drummies'.
Leave and Let Us Go presents a portrait of Iraq -a country often misunderstood and misrepresented. In this new book, Alexandra Rose Howland combines her own photographs with found images and written testimonies, her aim is to challenge and expand the ways that geopolitical events are communicated.
Photographer Richard Sharum travelled across Cuba to document the lives of isolated farmers, or 'Campesinos,' and their wider communities at a time of national transition.
Since 2015, French photographer Cyprien Clement-Delmas and South African photographerLindokuhle Sobekwa have collaborated to create a portrait of Daleside, a small Afrikanersuburb south-east of Johannesburg, South Africa.
During the summers of 2017 and 2018, Karen Knorr wasgiven a carte blanche to photograph the building siteof the disused Art-Deco Department store in Paris, LaSamaritaine.
Sebastien Cuvelier's journey to Iran was inspired bya manuscript written on travels to Persepolis madeby his late uncle in 1971. In this book, the photographsfrom Sebastien's time in Iran are layered on top of hislate uncle's diary as a conversation between the twojourneys.
Sackcloth and Ashes is the result of a lifetime of work by Polish photographer Witold Krassowski.
In 2009 Karolina Gembara moved to Delhi to learn photography and stayed for seven years. Whenwe lie down, grasses grow from us, comprises photographs taken during this period, as Gembaradeveloped a love/hate relationship with the city, borne out of a combination of fascination,homesickness and a feeling of transience.
Over the course of 10 years, photographer Rocco Rorandelli, travelled to India, China, Indonesia,USA, Germany, Bulgaria, Nigeria, Slovenia and Italy to document the impact of the tobacco industryon health, the economy and the environment.
This volume was inspired by the life and work of Victorian astronomer and photographer Thereza Dillwyn Llewelyn, and her father, John.
SPOOR comprises groups of colour photographs made by Roger Palmer while following rail routesbetween towns and settlements of South Africa. The photographs were accumulated between2014 and 2018 as Palmer drove along mostly minor roads through the country's nine provinces.
A tale of a group of mushrooms and their attempt to save their forest home. The book is illustratedwith images created by arranging mushroom sculptures on the plate of an enlarger on photographic paper, and exposing them to different light intensities.
For the past eight years, Åke Ericson has been documenting the daily life of the Roma people across Europe.
The images reproduced in this book are photographed by Chloe Sells in Botswana, using large and medium format cameras that use film. The work is later printed in a traditional darkroom. Some of the images are drawn on after they have been printed with paint and marker. Because of Sells' method of working, each outcome is unique.
Photographs of discarded items such as toothbrushes, playing cards, worn-out trainers, teargas canisters and children's dolls present an alternative portrait of residents of 'The Jungle' refugee camp in Calais, France.
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