Published by Damiani Editore, Bologna, 2010
ISBN 10: 886208112X ISBN 13: 9788862081122
Seller: LEFT COAST BOOKS, Santa Barbara, CA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Fine. [48] pages, chiefly illustrations; 34 x 42 cm. Firm binding, clean inside copy. Fine DJ. OVERSIZE! No priority/international, except by special arrangement. Black-and-white photographs of Bronx and Brooklyn, taken at night. A lavish publication. Size: Oblong. Collectible.
Published by Damiani, 2010
ISBN 10: 886208112X ISBN 13: 9788862081122
Seller: ANARTIST, New York, NY, U.S.A.
Oversize hardcover with dustjacket; unpaginated; as new condition; clean and crisp; no internal marks. Foreign shipping may be extra.
Published by Damiani, Bologna,, 2010
Seller: lamdha books, Wentworth Falls, NSW, Australia
Landscape folio hardcover; black cloth boards with embossed spine and lower front board titling, black endpapers; unpaginated monochrome glossy plates. Very minor wear only; near fine in like dustwrapper. Postage quoted is for a standard format octavo book. Final charges may vary depending on size and weight. "Caleb Cain Marcus' book 'The Silent Aftermath of Space' shows us where the light is - on the other side of the darkness. The spaces Cain Marcus records are lit in a way that the lightness is distant, or trapped in another space. He uses the stillness of night to record these scenes, which serve as a meditation on life in transitory places. Windows and doorways also play a prominent role in the book. Windows are lit, or covered over. Doorways are closed, or behind fences. One of the few open doorways in the book shows a lit window. Life might be where the light is, but it is not present in any of the images. Cain Marcus has chosen transitory spaces in which to create a number of his pictures. Parking lots, construction sites, the post office and rail lines are just some of places where he has frozen an empty moment, the stillness after the busy day. This book reads like a nocturnal journey that the photographer takes regularly, like he is looking for the light in the darkness. The images suggests he might be finding what he is looking for, but it is not certain. The most jarring moments in this night travels are when he steps into the light of the churches. In two instances, Cain Marcus shows us empty churches, rows of seats are vacant and the light rises above the spaces giving off a brightness that is absent in the remainder of the book. These images help clarify the metaphor of the light and dark and adds weight to it. The transition to the light is jarring, but clearly intentional. As an object the book is large, which serves the images well. It is a book that demands your attention while reading. The location of each image is all the reader is given in the captions that whisper beneath bold images. The thin gray type is subtle and manages to balance out the design. Robert Frank's short introduction serves the purpose of adding Cain Marcus to his photographic lineage. Ralph Gibson is also thanked at the end of the book. Both of these influences can be seen in the quiet, dark and thoughtful pictures. With multiple readings the work comes alive. At first glance the stillness of the pictures is easy to gloss over. The large images offer many different entry points giving a variety of readings, but this book requires more from the reader because of the stillness. This stillness shouts at the reader; 'Look here, what is it that you see?' " - Tom Leininger.
Published by Damiani, 2010
ISBN 10: 886208112X ISBN 13: 9788862081122
Seller: ANARTIST, New York, NY, U.S.A.
Hardcover with dustjacket, 48 pages, as new condition; clean and crisp; no internal marks. Foreign shipping may be extra.
Oversize hardcover with dustjacket; unpaginated; as new condition; clean and crisp; no internal marks. Foreign shipping may be extra for this item.