Andy Adams
Media geek • Picture junkie • Jazz fan / Read my newsletter at https://t.co/zmHLBtkzn5
Book Recommendations:
Recommended by Andy Adams
“@menka @mcelhearn @photobookjunkee @thamesandhudson @ThamesHudsonUSA @howarthsophie @rocky_nook @tedwaitt Thanks, Menka! I think you'll enjoy Sophie's book. I hope you're well!” (from X)
by Sophie Howarth·You?
by Sophie Howarth·You?
An inspiring guide to contemplative photography and a slow creative process, including hands-on assignments, and inspirational stories, illustrated with fifty photographs. In a world where millions of images are shot every day and fast-paced environments can exhaust and stifle creativity, The Mindful Photographer proposes a simple antidote: slowing down. Through twenty concepts as varied as “Confidence,” “Gratitude,” and “Compassion,” combined with hands-on assignments, author Sophie Howarth invites readers to reflect on their photographic practice and learn to pause, pay attention, and become more attuned with the world around them. Ranging from the canonical to the contemporary, The Mindful Photographer features the work of photographers including Edward Weston, Kali Spitzer, Nadav Kander, Thomas Merton, Sarker Protick, and many more. Their photographs are accompanied by quotes, stories, and anecdotes to both inspire the reader, and broaden their photographic knowledge and creative perspectives. Putting aside preconceived ideas and the competitive pressures of picture-perfect Instagram posts, this book rewires our relationship to photographic practice as one to be understood as unconditionally joyful and rewarding. Howarth’s insightful texts work as a guide to both a mindful approach to photography, and as a photographic approach to meditation. Offered in an affordable format, this will be the must-have companion for anyone seeking a more mindful approach to engaging with their world through photography. 50 color illustrations
Recommended by Andy Adams
“@schult_tobias @AdrainChesser I'm glad you found Adrain! TERRIFIC photographer. You should really see his book, The Return. I love it: https://t.co/vdCDyBSwxU” (from X)
by Adrain Chesser, Timothy White Eagle·You?
by Adrain Chesser, Timothy White Eagle·You?
Adrain Chesser and ritualist Timothy White Eagle traveled throughout western US with a loose band of comrades, practicing a hunter-gatherer way of life. A lyrical portrait of a contemporary nomadic existence, The Return is "a call to arms to detach from destructive modernity."—Hyperallergic Adrain Chesser is largely self-taught and has refined his practice through a mentor/protege relationship with Rosalind Solomon and later Debbie Fleming Caffery. He completed a Santa Fe Art Institute residency in April 2005. He has been featured on TEDx Vienna and has exhibited in Austria, Louisiana, Missouri, NYC, Pennsylvania, Washington and many more. Collections of Chesser’s work can be found at The Museum Fine Arts (Houston), Norton Museum of Art, Portland Museum of Fine Art and Vincent Price Collection At East Los Angeles College. Timothy White Eagle, born in Tucson AZ, his mother was Apache from White Mountain. He was given up for adoption and raised by a working class white family in Washington state. Graduated from Univ. of Utah with a BFA in Theater. He spent his 20's exploring performance based art. He has worked extensively in the past two decades exploring Native American, Pagan and other earth based Spiritual practices. He began a mentor/protege relationship with Shoshone Elder Clyde Hall in 1995. Around that same time he began helping to craft personal and community rituals within his Spiritual circles. In 2006 he began collaborating with photographer Adrain Chesser. Their work together has been displayed and published nationally and internationally. In 2014 he and Adrain released their book, "the Return". Timothy continues to foster relationships with artists seeking to create objects and performances which contain the convenience of Spirit. He dances at a unique cross roads between art and ritual.
Recommended by Andy Adams
“I mentioned this here the other day and wanted to recommend this book again. @gulnara_nyc has assembled a stellar collection of photographers here and I know many of you will love this. Follow @womenstrphotos if you aren't already. Great book! #flakphotobooks https://t.co/HF2JOs9o4Z” (from X)
by Gulnara Samoilova, Ami Vitale, Melissa Breyer·You?
by Gulnara Samoilova, Ami Vitale, Melissa Breyer·You?
With a rising number of women throughout the world picking up their cameras and capturing their surroundings, this book explores the work of 100 women and the experiences behind their greatest images. Traditionally a male-dominated field, street photography is increasingly becoming the domain of women. This fantastic collection of images reflects that shift, showcasing 100 contemporary women street photographers working around the world today, accompanied by personal statements about their work. Variously joyful, unsettling and unexpected, the photographs capture a wide range of extraordinary moments. The volume is curated by Gulnara Samoilova, founder of the Women Street Photographers project: a website, social media platform and annual exhibition. Photographer Melissa Breyer's introductory essay explores how the genre has intersected with gender throughout history, looking at how cultural changes in gender roles have overlapped with technological developments in the camera to allow key historical figures to emerge. Her text is complemented by a foreword by renowned photojournalist Ami Vitale, whose career as a war photographer and, later, global travels with National Geographic have allowed a unique insight into the realities of working as a woman photographer in different countries. In turns intimate and candid, the photographs featured in this book offer a kaleidoscopic glimpse of what happens when women across the world are behind the camera.
Recommended by Andy Adams
“I love these pictures. Book folks, check this out: https://t.co/SKUbW69zLb” (from X)
by Martin Buday, Elisa Wouk Almino, Nicole Kaack·You?
by Martin Buday, Elisa Wouk Almino, Nicole Kaack·You?
Prophetic Kingdom is an ongoing photographic investigation exploring scenes of the everyday and overlooked. The images give an allegorical nod towards a prophesied postlapsarian world. -- Martin Buday ― Martin Buday
Recommended by Andy Adams
“@PaulWChambers70 Yeah, I'm thinking I may do same. I've heard great things about that book. Thanks, Paul!” (from X)
by Emmet Gowin, Keith F. Davis PhD, Carlos Gollonet·You?
by Emmet Gowin, Keith F. Davis PhD, Carlos Gollonet·You?
Throughout his prolific career as a photographer, Emmet Gowin has threaded together seemingly disparate subjects: his wife, Edith, and their extended family; American and European landscapes; aerial views of environmental devastation, brought together by his ongoing interest in issues of scale, the impact of the individual, and notions of belonging. This long-awaited survey pays tribute to Gowin’s remarkable career and his impact on the medium. Following his marriage to Edith Morris in 1964, Gowin began work on a series of images of his extended family that is now recognized as a touchstone of twentieth-century American photography. He photographed the children and the aging parents, and made intimate portraits of his wife, continuing a photographic tradition inherited from his mentor, Harry Callahan, with whom he studied in the 1960s. His focus broadened in the 1980s, when he began an exploration of landscape and aerial photography, most specifically in his documentation of Mount St. Helens and the American West. He has photographed in the Czech Republic, Italy, Mexico, Japan and the United States, with a continued interest in irrigation, mining and natural resources, and the effects of military testing on the environment. As a photography professor at Princeton University from 1973 to 2009, Gowin has exerted a powerful influence on several generations of photographers. Copublished by Aperture and Fundación MAPFRE
Recommended by Andy Adams
“Great book 👇📚 https://t.co/acQrJNmc4W” (from X)
by Shane Lavalette, Tim Davis·You?
by Shane Lavalette, Tim Davis·You?
Shane Lavalette was commissioned by the High Museum of Art in Atlanta to create a new series of photographs for their 2012 exhibition, Picturing the South. Lavalette's monograph, One Sun, One Shadow, is an extension of this body of work. Native to the Northeast, it was primarily through traditional music the sounds of old time, blues, and gospel that Lavalette had formed a relationship with the South. With that in mind, the region s rich musical history became the natural entry point for this project and the resulting photographs. Moved by the themes and stories past down in songs, Lavalette let the music itself carry the pictures. One Sun, One Shadow includes a text by artist and poet Tim Davis.
Recommended by Andy Adams
“@aebrockman @JennyLewisPhoto @HoxtonMiniPress @photobookjunkee @gallegosfer Totally recommend it. The photography is lovely, and the stories are quite interesting. Moreso, it's a thought-provoking book. Looking at and reading these stories put me in a reflective state of mind. A+ book. It's on sale too!” (from X)
by Jenny Lewis·You?
by Jenny Lewis·You?
If all of life can be seen in a grain of sand then it can certainly be found in the melting pot of Hackney. Renowned photographer Jenny Lewis has taken a hundred portraits of her community, covering every age from 1-100 in chronological order. The series captures the worries, hopes, fears, passions, joys, regrets and much inbetween of those who, just like us, are travelling on this strange journey from birth to death.
Recommended by Andy Adams
“Book people, you might check this one out. I've been reading chapters of @AniPemaChodron's classic in the mornings with my coffee this summer. It's given me much needed perspective every time. I hope you enjoy this one as much as I have. https://t.co/0nGnBps4wW” (from X)
by Pema Chodron·You?
by Pema Chodron·You?
The beautiful practicality of her teaching has made Pema Chödrön one of the most beloved of contemporary American spiritual authors among Buddhists and non-Buddhists alike. A collection of talks she gave between 1987 and 1994, the book is a treasury of wisdom for going on living when we are overcome by pain and difficulties. Chödrön Using painful emotions to cultivate wisdom, compassion, and courage Communicating so as to encourage others to open up rather than shut down Practices for reversing habitual patterns Methods for working with chaotic situations Ways for creating effective social action