1/30Alex Majoli and Paolo Pellegrin, Congo
In this beautifully printed, large-format, limited-edition publication, world-renowned documentary photographers Alex Majoli and Paolo Pellegrin capture the Congo and its people.
Photo: 2012 Congo-Majoli/Pellegrin/Magnum Photos. Courtesy of Cherry Grove Gallery, Megeve2/30
Photo: 2012 Congo-Majoli/Pellegrin/Magnum Photos. Courtesy of Cherry Grove Gallery, Megeve3/30
4/30Gus Powell, The Lonely Ones
Gus Powell’s book The Lonely Ones brings the reader through a thoughtful journey with its fragmented phrases on the front of 40 gatefolds, all of which open up onto ethereal color photographs untethered from time and place.
Photo: Gus Powell5/30More from Vogue
Photo: Gus Powell6/30
7/30Tod Papageorge, Studio 54
Tod Papageorge photographed the club that defined a generation in two short years (from 1978-1980) and perfectly captured the glitz, glamour, and decadence in his book Studio 54.
Photo: Tod Papageorge8/30
Photo: Tod Papageorge9/30
10/30Alec Soth, Gathered Leaves
Alec Soth’s Gathered Leaves is a catalog that spans more than a decade of the photographer’s work. Including four mini-facsimile versions of books, three of which are out of print, as well as 29 large-format postcards, this is the ultimate present for any photo book collectsor.
Photo: © Alec Soth11/30
Photo: © Alec Soth12/30
13/30Walter Chandoha, Walter Chandoha: The Cat Photographer
Walter Chandoha has been photographing cats since the 1950s and has culled together 50 of his favorite images to create the furriest and cutest photo book of 2015.
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Photo: © Walter Chandoha14/30
Photo: © Walter Chandoha15/30
16/30Mary Ellen Mark, Tiny: Streetwise Revisited
Tiny: Streetwise Revisited is an intimate and powerful exploration of American life through the documentation of Erin “Tiny” Charles from the time she was 13 until the end of Mary Ellen Mark’s iconic career.
Photo: © Mary Ellen Mark17/30Tiny, 1983
Photo: © Mary Ellen Mark18/30White Junior and Justin, 1983
19/30George Steinmetz, New York Air: The View From Above
Photographing from summer through winter, dusk until dawn, George Steinmetz captures New York from above the crowds and skyscrapers—arguably New York’s best angle.
Photo: © George Steinmetz20/30Moviegoers on the lawn in Bryant Park for the HBO Summer Film Festival.
Photo: © George Steinmetz21/30At twilight, Manhattan resembles a vast living organism with ribbons of energy pulsing through its streets and up into its 100,000 buildings.
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22/30Joni Sternbach, Surf Site Tin Type
In a time when phone cameras are ubiquitous, Joni Sternbach captures the surfing community as it’s never been seen before by using a 19th-century wet-plate collodion process with a large-format camera.
Photo: Joni Sternbach23/30Hannah, Surfrider Beach, Malibu, California, 2010
Photo: Joni Sternbach24/30Three surfers, Morro Rock, California, 2013
25/30Ken Light, What’s Going On? 1969-1974
In What’s Going On? 1969-1974, Ken Light intimately captures the American landscape during the political and cultural turmoil of 1969-1974 and creates a historical love song to America during this time.
Photo: Ken Light26/30
Photo: Ken Light27/30
28/30Lili Holzer-Glier, Rockabye
In a mix of color portraits and landscapes, Lili Holzer-Glier elegantly documents the New York neighborhood of the Rockaways after the devastation of Hurricane Sandy.
Photo: Lili Holzer-Glier29/30A tree near Fort Tilden beach in the Rockaways is now permanently bent sideways
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Photo: Lili Holzer-Glier30/30Hurricane Sandy survivor Dona at her Far Rockaway rental
