Penelope Umbrico Moving Mountains ebook

Penelope Umbrico’s first artist’s ebook is now available as a free download on iTunes.

In October 2012, Aperture presented Penelope Umbrico’s Moving Mountains (1850–2012) as part of Aperture Remix, an artist commission and exhibition. For the project, a select group of contemporary photographers were invited to choose an Aperture publication and to pay it artistic homage. The works that each artist created for Aperture Remix—incorporating new images made in response or interventions with the original publication itself—comprise a way of mapping the enduring influence of Aperture’s publication history as it relates to contemporary practice.

Umbrico worked with the Aperture Masters of Photography series, focusing on the mountain, a classic and long-standing subject of photographers as symbolic of the idea of mastery. Using a series of camera apps and filters on her iPhone, she created new photographs of the mountains that appear throughout the series, drawing on images from Edward Weston, Wynn Bullock, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Manuel Álvarez Bravo, and others. For the exhibition, Umbrico arranged a grouping of over eighty new images side-by-side with vintage prints of each of the images that she had re-photographed from the pages of the Masters series. In doing so, the expansive and elastic nature of contemporary photography was neatly illustrated—from the original, stable object of the masters, to the to the ever-mutating, fluctuating digital iterations possible today.

A limited-edition book created for the exhibition, drawing on the format and design of the Masters Series, included over seventy-five images out of the hundreds created as part of her process; subsequently, Umbrico has created an ebook containing over one hundred images and downloadable for free—in many ways, the optimum manifestation of the project.

Moving Mountains is Aperture’s first artist’s ebook—and it’s free! Click here to visit the iTunes store and download the ebook.


Aperture published Penelope Umbrico’s first monograph Penelope Umbrico: Photographs in 2011.