THE
BOOK OF 101 BOOKS
Andrew Roth
Hardbound, 9½" x 11½", 320 pages
2001, Distributed Art Publishers
500 Black-and-white and color illustrations
Edited by Andrew Roth
Essays by Vince Aletti, Richard Benson, May Castleberry, Jeffrey
Fraenkel, David Levi Strauss, Daido Moriyama, Shelley Rice and
Neville Wakefield
From the publisher:
The
history of the photographic book goes back well more than a century;
the medium of photography and the book format were understood
very early on to relate to each other on both technical and aesthetic
levels. The examples of truly great combinations of photographic
image and text, great design and typography bound together as
books are numerous, and make up an impressive artistic, social,
and documentary statement of the l0th century. Writer and rare
book expert Andrew Roth has selected for this volume a group of
101 of the best photography books ever published: books that bring
all of the elements of great bookmaking together to create, ultimately,
a thing of beauty, a work of art. Mostly made up of publications
in which the photographs were meant to be seen in book form, as
opposed to the book being merely a repository of images, this
list includes many artists and titles that will be familiar to
the collector, but also not a few surprises. Chronologically,
the first book is Volume One of Edward Curtis's seminal 1907 The
North American Indian, the last is David LaChapelle's LaChapelle
Land from 1996, and in between are books by Walker Evans and Berenice
Abbott, Atget and Brassai, Robert Frank and Garry Winogrand, and
many other seminal photographers from all over the world. Each
book in the catalogue will receive a double page spread which
will include publication information, several image spreads, and
a short text about it.
The Book of 101 Books, however, is far more than simply
an annotated and illustrated catalogue. Six important new essays
on a variety of related topics from respected scholars, critics,
and artists are included as well: here you will find Richard Benson
on the history of printing techniques, Shelley Rice on the societal
significance of photography books, May Castleberry on reprints,
exhibitions, and keeping books alive for the public; Daido Moriyama
on his personal memories of making his classic Bye Bye Photography,
Dear, Neville Wakefield on the particular attributes of one of
the most recent books in this group: Richard Prince's 1995 Adult
Comedy Action Drama, and Jeffrey Fraenkel on the myriad perils
of publishing photography books. The catalogue entries themselves
are written by the well known critics Vince Aletti and David Levi
Strauss.Taken together, the depth and beauty of these essays and
images will make The Book of 101 Books both an essential reference
and an aesthetically compelling object.
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