
Berlin Living Rooms (2017) is a photography book by Dominique Nabokov, capturing the personal living spaces of artists, writers, and creative residents in Berlin without them present.

Charlotte Perriand (1903-1999) is undoubtedly one of the most significant figures in 20th-century interior design. This is the first monograph of her works.

This book showcases the vibrant life and work of David Hicks, the groundbreaking British designer known for bold geometrics and daring color. Drawn from 24 personal scrapbooks, it features press clippings, sketches, textiles, and photographs of family and icons.

Donald Judd Furniture surveys over one hundred furniture pieces created by Donald Judd between 1970 and 1991 for his spaces at 101 Spring Street in New York and in Marfa, Texas. Through drawings and photographs, the book highlights Judd’s minimalist forms, functional clarity, material precision, and his thoughtful response to mass production and design.

This updated edition brings back to life an era of Paris' history, seen through Nabokov’s original Polaroid photos, together with the original introduction by the late interior designer Andrée Putman.

A book on the work of Xavier Corberó (1935-2017) – one of the most important Spanish artists of the last century. His sculptures in rough-hewn stone, marble, and bronze gave form to ideas running through a circle of contemporary surrealist artists, including Salvador Dalí, Marcel Duchamp, Max Ernst, and Joan Miró, but with pieces distinctly his own.

A book detailing the exquisite textiles and wallpaper patterns throughout the interiors of the iconic Hotel Okura in Tokyo which was built two years ahead of the Tokyo Olympics in 1964 by a diverse team of designers including architects Yoshiro Taniguchi and Hideo Kosaka, folk artist Shiko Munakata and potter Kenkichi Tomimoto. The design of the building adopted a modern aesthetic that would still reference the traditional colours, shapes and crafts of Japan. The Okura was demolished, so this book is testament to a lost relic of Japanese modernism.

The eighth volume of the Villages and Towns series explores vernacular architecture across the Iberian Peninsula. With texts by Fernando Higueras Díaz and photographs by Yukio Futagawa, it examines landscape, climate, community harmony, environmental preservation, and natural light, highlighting shared regional principles that create enduring architectural diversity.

Issue on interior design in America.


Issue on houses and interiors in Southern Europe

Berlin Living Rooms (2017) is a photography book by Dominique Nabokov, capturing the personal living spaces of artists, writers, and creative residents in Berlin without them present.

This book showcases the vibrant life and work of David Hicks, the groundbreaking British designer known for bold geometrics and daring color. Drawn from 24 personal scrapbooks, it features press clippings, sketches, textiles, and photographs of family and icons.

The eighth volume of the Villages and Towns series explores vernacular architecture across the Iberian Peninsula. With texts by Fernando Higueras Díaz and photographs by Yukio Futagawa, it examines landscape, climate, community harmony, environmental preservation, and natural light, highlighting shared regional principles that create enduring architectural diversity.

Issue on houses and interiors in Southern Europe

Charlotte Perriand (1903-1999) is undoubtedly one of the most significant figures in 20th-century interior design. This is the first monograph of her works.

David Hicks explores all aspects of interior decoration and design.

This updated edition brings back to life an era of Paris' history, seen through Nabokov’s original Polaroid photos, together with the original introduction by the late interior designer Andrée Putman.

Issue on houses in the Northern Europe.

A book on the work of Xavier Corberó (1935-2017) – one of the most important Spanish artists of the last century. His sculptures in rough-hewn stone, marble, and bronze gave form to ideas running through a circle of contemporary surrealist artists, including Salvador Dalí, Marcel Duchamp, Max Ernst, and Joan Miró, but with pieces distinctly his own.

A book detailing the exquisite textiles and wallpaper patterns throughout the interiors of the iconic Hotel Okura in Tokyo which was built two years ahead of the Tokyo Olympics in 1964 by a diverse team of designers including architects Yoshiro Taniguchi and Hideo Kosaka, folk artist Shiko Munakata and potter Kenkichi Tomimoto. The design of the building adopted a modern aesthetic that would still reference the traditional colours, shapes and crafts of Japan. The Okura was demolished, so this book is testament to a lost relic of Japanese modernism.

Issue on houses in the U.S.A.

Issue on the work of Frank Lloyd Wright.

Issue on interior design in Latin America.