
Monograph of the work by Abdoulaye Konaté, an artist who primarily takes the form of textile-based installations to explore socio-political and environmental issues, as well as foregrounding his aesthetic concerns and formal language.

Jamaican artist Deborah Anzinger (born 1978) works at the intersection of Black feminist thought, geography and space to create sculptures, videos, paintings and installations combining synthetic and living materials. An Unlikely Birth compiles her material and conceptual experiments.

An exhibition catalogue published by The Redfern Gallery documenting new work by the British painter. Featuring contributions from Wes Lang and Reba Maybury, it highlights his shift toward narrative-driven, observational painting, influenced by his time in St. Ives and the US.

While Joseph Beuys, Marcel Broodthaers, Robert Rauschenberg, and Andy Warhol are not a “group” in the formal sense, they are tightly connected through postwar avant-garde art, especially the shift from modernism to conceptual, media-aware, and socially engaged art in the 1950s–70s. This is a catalogue of their works from a show presented at Galerie Isy Brachot in Paris.

This book presents two decades of Beverly Pepper's bold sculptural statements – from the highly polished stainless-steel works of the 1960s to the earthbound geometrics of the 1970s to the more recent monoliths.
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To mark the twentieth anniversary of Obrist's landmark project 'do it', this publication presents the history of this ambitious enterprise and gives new impetus to its future. It includes an archive of artists' instructions, essays contextualizing Do It, documentation from the history of the exhibition and instructions by 200 artists from all over the world selected by Obrist,

Edward Thomas Allington was a British artist and sculptor, best known for his part in the 1980s New British Sculpture movement.

Ever Since Night Falls looks at the adventures and misadventures of lost artworks throughout history: records of bad luck, disappearance or deliberation. This publication gives a glimpse into works that have vanished from the reaches of humanity in one form or another — stemming from motivations that encompass human error, greed, ideology and passion.

The Fundamental Picture is a series of thirty-nine works by English artists Gilbert & George that was exhibited simultaneously at the Lehmann Maupin and Sonnabend Galleries from 3 May through 28 June 1997.

Hanoos Hanoos was born in Iraq in 1958, where he studied at the Institute of Fine Arts in Baghdad. He moved to Madrid, Spain, in 1984 where he obtained his PhD and has lived ever since. This book looks at his print makings, paintings and collage works.

Three of the best-known artists from the YBA group come together in an exhibition of their work and ideas. This book offers their personal communications with each other, providing a unique insight into their creative processes.

Exhibition catalogue published to coincides with the exhibition by British Sculpture Gavin Turk, In Search of Ariadne, at The Heong Gallery at Downing College.

A publication to accompany the British Pavilion’s exhibition of the same name at the 16th Venice Architecture Biennale, explores an island as a place of refuge and exile. With contributions from artist John Akomfrah, poet and musician Kate Tempest and Museu Calouste Gulbenkian director Penelope Curtis.

Exhibition catalogue of the work of John Piper – a pivotal 20th-century British artist celebrated for his evocative landscapes, churches, and monuments, bridging English Romanticism with modernism, abstraction, and surrealism, working across painting, printmaking, stained glass, theatre sets, and textile design.

This exhibition catalogue weaves the thread between sculpture, fashion photography and art. Featuring an essay by Sarah Mower and an interview with Jonathan Anderson.

A collection of paintings by American painter Lois Dodd known for her deceptively simple, observant paintings of everyday life, capturing landscapes, windows, and interiors with a unique, almost abstract clarity, often painting outdoors on small panels, and co-founding the influential Tanager Gallery in the 1950s.

Liz Rideal is an artist, writer, and Professor of Fine Art at the Slade School of Fine Art, University College London. Working across a variety of media including photography, printmaking, and painting, Rideal explores themes of drapery, portraiture and pilgrimage in her work.

Naïvy by Coco Capitán presents the artists paintings, large-scale photographs, and artist-embellished found objects, which expands upon the visual possibilities that open up to the artist through contemplation of an iconic form of apparel: the sailor suit.

Despite his exceedingly premature death at the age of 32, Davis’s paintings have deeply influenced the rise of figurative and representational painting in the twenty-first century. Davis’s emotionally charged work places him firmly in the canon of great American painting. Compiled through the unique relationship between Davis and Helen Molesworth, this monograph tells the story of a brilliant artist and cultural force through the eyes of his friends and collaborators.

In One Day, Something Happens: Paintings of People the celebrated writer, art critic and co-editor of Frieze magazine, Jennifer Higgie, illuminates her fascination for the figure in modern British painting through the works of 40 diverse artists from the past century.

The publication is the catalogue of the exhibition On Failure, which examined and reconsidered the connotations of failure – repositioning the concept as an intentional outcome or state of being, often via an interrogation of what cost this approach comes at. Featuring artists Olivia Erlanger, Cash Frances, Jordan/Martin Hell, Kelsey Isaacs, Maren Karlson, Sam Lipp, Chris Lloyd and Narumi Nekpenekpen.

Prison Notebook is a powerful visual memoir by pioneering Sudanese modernist artist Ibrahim El-Salahi, documenting his wrongful imprisonment in Khartoum's Kober Prison in 1975 through delicate pen-and-ink drawings, Arabic prose, and poetry, offering a personal account of his surreal experiences and enduring hope, published as a book featuring facsimiles, translations, and critical essays.
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An exploration of the captivating work and mystical outlook of the modern artist Remedios Varo, focusing on her years in Mexico City.

A monograph dedicated to the oil paintings of London-based artist Somaya Critchlow. Drawing upon her expansive knowledge of picture-making traditions ranging from the Renaissance to the Rococo, Critchlow’s mix of miniature and medium-sized portraits of voluptuous, nonchalant Black women raise questions about sexuality, feminism, pornography, beauty and power.

Begun in 2014, Njideka Akunyili Crosby's ongoing series, The Beautyful Ones is comprised of portraits of Nigerian children, including members of the artist's family, derived from personal photographs and, more recently, from images taken during her frequent visits to Nigeria, where Akunyili Crosby lived until the age of sixteen.

Publication accompanying an exhibition at the Jerwood Gallery, showcasing the unique, often dark and macabre, artistic style of painter Paula Rego.

American bioacoustician and musician Bernie Krause has recorded over 5,000 hours of natural soundscapes since the 1970s. Both poetic and scientific, his archive reveals the musical harmony and orchestral structure of nature. This book presents an immersive installation created in 2016 by Krause and United Visual Artists for the Fondation Cartier in Paris. It traces the transformation of Krause’s field recordings into a three-dimensional audiovisual experience that blends art, technology, and ecology.

The book covers the foundational years of the Ferus Gallery, showcasing artists like Wallace Berman, John Altoon, Edward Kienholz, and Larry Bell. Through photographs and textual contributions, this book documents the Southern California art scene of that era.

The Other Story: Afro-Asian Artists in Post-War Britain is a seminal 1989 exhibition catalogue published by the Hayward Gallery/Southbank Centre, London, edited and curated by artist Rasheed Araeen. This scarce book documents the first major survey of African, Caribbean, and Asian artists' contributions to British post-war modernism.

Ray Johnson (1927–1995) was an influential American artist known as the "father of mail art" and a key figure in early Pop Art and Neo-Dada. He founded the New York Correspondence School, sending collages and letters through the mail to friends and acquaintances. Known as "New York's most famous unknown artist," he specialized in, surreal, text-heavy collages.

A book of the exhibition curated by Issey Miyake that explores the relationship between human body and the way things are made as a platform for considering how things will be made in the future.
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Shot over the period of 5 months in 2017, Yodo Hito documents the communities and individuals who have built their homes or congregate along the concrete oodplains of the Yodogawa River in Osaka city, Japan.

While Joseph Beuys, Marcel Broodthaers, Robert Rauschenberg, and Andy Warhol are not a “group” in the formal sense, they are tightly connected through postwar avant-garde art, especially the shift from modernism to conceptual, media-aware, and socially engaged art in the 1950s–70s. This is a catalogue of their works from a show presented at Galerie Isy Brachot in Paris.

The Other Story: Afro-Asian Artists in Post-War Britain is a seminal 1989 exhibition catalogue published by the Hayward Gallery/Southbank Centre, London, edited and curated by artist Rasheed Araeen. This scarce book documents the first major survey of African, Caribbean, and Asian artists' contributions to British post-war modernism.
.jpg)
To mark the twentieth anniversary of Obrist's landmark project 'do it', this publication presents the history of this ambitious enterprise and gives new impetus to its future. It includes an archive of artists' instructions, essays contextualizing Do It, documentation from the history of the exhibition and instructions by 200 artists from all over the world selected by Obrist,

Edward Thomas Allington was a British artist and sculptor, best known for his part in the 1980s New British Sculpture movement.

Jamaican artist Deborah Anzinger (born 1978) works at the intersection of Black feminist thought, geography and space to create sculptures, videos, paintings and installations combining synthetic and living materials. An Unlikely Birth compiles her material and conceptual experiments.

This exhibition catalogue weaves the thread between sculpture, fashion photography and art. Featuring an essay by Sarah Mower and an interview with Jonathan Anderson.

In One Day, Something Happens: Paintings of People the celebrated writer, art critic and co-editor of Frieze magazine, Jennifer Higgie, illuminates her fascination for the figure in modern British painting through the works of 40 diverse artists from the past century.
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Book of works from the artist's solo exhibition at Eighteen gallery.

American bioacoustician and musician Bernie Krause has recorded over 5,000 hours of natural soundscapes since the 1970s. Both poetic and scientific, his archive reveals the musical harmony and orchestral structure of nature. This book presents an immersive installation created in 2016 by Krause and United Visual Artists for the Fondation Cartier in Paris. It traces the transformation of Krause’s field recordings into a three-dimensional audiovisual experience that blends art, technology, and ecology.

A book of the exhibition curated by Issey Miyake that explores the relationship between human body and the way things are made as a platform for considering how things will be made in the future.

Three of the best-known artists from the YBA group come together in an exhibition of their work and ideas. This book offers their personal communications with each other, providing a unique insight into their creative processes.

Exhibition catalogue of the work of John Piper – a pivotal 20th-century British artist celebrated for his evocative landscapes, churches, and monuments, bridging English Romanticism with modernism, abstraction, and surrealism, working across painting, printmaking, stained glass, theatre sets, and textile design.

Hanoos Hanoos was born in Iraq in 1958, where he studied at the Institute of Fine Arts in Baghdad. He moved to Madrid, Spain, in 1984 where he obtained his PhD and has lived ever since. This book looks at his print makings, paintings and collage works.

A collection of paintings by American painter Lois Dodd known for her deceptively simple, observant paintings of everyday life, capturing landscapes, windows, and interiors with a unique, almost abstract clarity, often painting outdoors on small panels, and co-founding the influential Tanager Gallery in the 1950s.

An exhibition catalogue published by The Redfern Gallery documenting new work by the British painter. Featuring contributions from Wes Lang and Reba Maybury, it highlights his shift toward narrative-driven, observational painting, influenced by his time in St. Ives and the US.

Exhibition catalogue published to coincides with the exhibition by British Sculpture Gavin Turk, In Search of Ariadne, at The Heong Gallery at Downing College.