Judith Black’s new photobook traces her home life in New England from 1968 to 2000—and builds upon an American documentary tradition.
The LA-based artist speaks about the process of editing—and the role that bookmaking has played in the evolution of his work.
Dana Lixenberg revisits her portraits of pop-culture icons and everyday citizens.
An extraordinary photobook reveals the lives of persecuted Germans during World War II.
In the digital age, locking down a sequence of images in print can seem like an act of resistance.
Six artists on the photobook at the end of the millennium.
Teju Cole’s first photobook unfolds the possibilities of text and image.
An innovative book juxtaposes images from the archives of two South African families—one black, and one white.
How comic books illustrated with photographs became a great popular art form.
For Bronwyn Law-Viljoen, publisher of Fourthwall Books, the photobook is a space for political and social history.
In 1826 a thirty-year-old slave escapes captivity becoming a legally free, outspoken and effective supporter of the abolitionist cause.
A photobook is most immersive when it arouses an awakening in the reader—and In the Shadow of…
“There is no truer mark of financial success than making money work for you, instead of having…
My bookshelves are a repository that’s both retrospective and forward-looking. They represent numerous journeys I’ve already taken…
The fourth annual Paris Photo–Aperture Foundation PhotoBook Awards shortlist is on view through May 28, 2016
Take a look inside the winning titles of the 2015 edition of the Paris Photo–Aperture Foundation PhotoBook Awards
Jason Fulford and Aperture editor Denise Wolff discussed the parallel lives of a book through its events, and the event as intersection of artist and viewer.
The Spring 2015 issue of The PhotoBook Review, Aperture’s biannual journal dedicated to the consideration of the photobook, is out now.
The spring 2024 issue, “Counter Histories,” is produced in collaboration with Magnum Foundation and features photographers from around the world who reframe complex histories.