Prices in AUD. Shipping worldwide. Flat rate $8 postage per order within Australia. International by weight calculated at checkout. Read full terms.
- You cannot add "Bis Jonvelle" to the cart because the product is out of stock.
-
Lewis Morley
Judy Annear; Lewis Morley
Sydney: The Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2006.Exhibition catalogue. With an essay by Barry Humphries.
-
Island Maidens: The Photography of David Betts
David Betts
Croydon: Creative Monochrome, 1995.Nude photography of female models taken on the Isle of Wight.
-
Death of an Alchemist
Michael Prior
Melbourne: Prior Art, 2019.A short compendium of photo-alchemical works chronicling the photographer’s passage toward the void. The final published work by experimental photographer Michael Prior documenting the effects of advanced myeloma on his body through alternative photographic processes. The works are arranged into three themes: Shades of the Alchemist; Garden Images. The Premonitory Return to Nature; The Hospital Room and its Uncanny Inhabitants. Each image has an accompanying commentary relating to the individual image as well as the broader themes, technical and philosophical, which underlie their creation. An accompanying exhibition was held at Fox Darkroom & Gallery, 16 February – 3 March 2019. Prior passed away in May of that year. Preface by Ellie Young. Editing by Dr Dianne Clifton and Richard Freadman. Elegantly bound by Nikola Doslov of Renaissance Bindery. Unrecorded in OCLC or Trove. This copy inscribed by Prior.
-
The Forgotten Frames: A Photographic Voyage with the People of Bastar
Manoj Kumar Jain
[Uttar Pradesh]: Manoj Kumar Jain, 2014. -
Paradeisos
Christopher Koller
Melbourne: M.33, 2011.“Produced over a period of 12 years, Christopher Koller’s plastic camera photographs of gardens and otherwise mediated greenery forge a very different atmosphere to what one would expect from such subject matter. Warped, stretched and almost affronting in their blurred optical qualities, the images that fill Paradeisos are vivid and almost visceral in their odd beauty.” (publisher’s blurb)
-
Open Shutters Iraq
Eugenie Dolberg
London: Trolley, 2010.“This book is a collection of individual photographs and photographic essays made by women from Baghdad, Basra, Falluja, Kirkuk and Mosul in 2006/7. These women were not photographers or writers, but were brought together by their need to tell their stories.” (from preface)
-
Sarah Lucas: 4.2 – 31.3.1996
Sarah Lucas
Rotterdam: Museum Boymans van Beuningen, 1996.Catalogue for an exhibition by English contemporary artist Sarah Lucas. This copy from the collection of photographer Lewis Morley, with the Lewis and Patricia Morley Library exlibris plate.
-
Saltwater People of the Broken Bays: Sydney’s Northern Beaches
John Ogden
Sydney: Cyclops Press, 2011.A focused look at the shorelines of northern Sydney, New South Wales, and the people who inhabit them, from ancient times through to modern surfing.
-
Wilderness Collections: Swan Song
Rodney Lough Jr.
Happy Valley, Oregon: The Lough Road, 2016.Nature / wilderness landscape photo book.
-
Landscape, 2007 – 2014
Piyatat Hemmatat
[Chicago]: Serindia Contemporary, 2015.“LANDSCAPE 2007-2014 by Piyatat Hemmatat is a limited edition (of 500) artist’s book of his Landscape series in which for the last seven years he explored ‘his alternate reality’, the landscape. His exploration of nature has informed many of his published projects and has enabled him to get back in touch with his instincts and derive creative strength from them. LANDSCAPE is a collection of his most illuminating encounters that translated into a stunning selection of thirty landscape photographs in this beautifully-produced artist’s edition volume.” (publisher’s blurb)
-
Portrait of a People: The Tiwi of Northern Australia
Heide Smith
Narooma: Hobbs Point Publishing, 2008. -
Saltwater People of the Broken Bays / Fatal Shore: Sydney’s Northern / Southern Beaches (2 Volumes)
John Ogden
Sydney: Cyclops Press, 2012.The slipcased issue of both volumes, together encompassing a focused look at the shorelines of Sydney, New South Wales, and the people who inhabit them, from ancient times through to modern surfing.
-
Daughters
Margaret M. de Lange
London: Trolley, 2009.“Fifteen years ago Norwegian photographer Margaret M. de Lange was at home looking after her two young daughters. She soon picked up her camera and began to photograph what came a natural subject matter to her – her daughters.” (from back cover)
-
Cactus: Surfing Journals from Solitude
Christo Reid
Forresters Beach: Strangelove Press, 2010.Illustrated history of surfing in South Australia.
-
The Language of Oysters
Robert Adamson; Juno Gemes
Sydney: Craftsman House, 1997.Photo and poetry book on the lives of the oyster farmers on the Hawkesbury River, New South Wales. This copy inscribed by the photographer, Juno Gemes.
-
Leros
Alex Majoli
London: Trolley, 2002.Debut photo book by Magnum photographer Alex Majoli documenting the psychiatric hospital on the Greek island of Leros.
-
Portraits from a Land Without People
John Ogden
Sydney: Cyclops Press, 2008.A Pictorial Anthology of Indigenous Australia, 1847-2008. This copy signed and numbered by Jimmy Little and signed by John Ogden.
-
At Water’s Edge
Paul Blackmore
Sydney: T&G Publishing, 2012.“At Water’s Edge, the long-awaited publication from photographer Paul Blackmore, explores the relationship between humanity and its most vital natural resource. This extraordinary body of work – spanning 11 years and 14 countries – provides a global look at how water flows through the spiritual and physical daily lives of people around the world. The photographs poignantly illustrate the unfolding drama of the global water crisis and how it is affecting those caught up in it: a billion people without access to clean water, another four billion without an adequate supply. Against this dire backdrop, the work also celebrates the quiet, yet essential connection with nature that water offers us.” (publisher’s blurb)
-
Rage Against The Light
Markus Andersen
Sydney: T&G Publishing, 2015.“Markus Andersen’s photographs feature the city of Sydney as an abstracted backdrop for a fragile human presence, one dwarfed by overwhelming architectural development and consumerism. In these moody black-and-white images, people scurry about and are literally exposed by light. Struck by shafts of illumination between buildings, they are like insects coming out for food.” (publisher’s blurb)
-
No Worries
Martin Parr
Sydney: T&G Publishing, 2011.“In 2011 Magnum photographer Martin Parr set out to photograph three Western Australian port cities, Fremantle, Port Hedland and Broome. Each town was a unique setting for a photographer famed for his images of British seaside culture in the publication Last Resort. Using his unmistakably intimate and satirical style, Parr went about photographing Australian cliches, full of saturated colours and flash photography. The resulting photographs, published here for the first time, are an invaluable collection from this world-renowned British photographer.” (publisher’s blurb)