<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><strong>Alison Rossiter's large-format homage to the sculptural properties of photographic paper</strong></p><p>This volume documents 12 paper works made from the earliest expired photographic papers in the collection of New York-based artist Alison Rossiter (born 1953), created in honor of Anna Atkins, the first person to illustrate a book with photographs. The exact expiration dates of these papers pinpoint their location on a timeline and coexist with events in world history. <p/>No matter what the light-sensitive materials have endured through dormant years, they still respond to chemical development, and the resulting photographic tones are evidence of experience. Physical damage, moisture and mold produce tonal changes when developed. This book, a copublication with the New York Public Library and Yossi Milo, includes all 12 works from the series at actual scale, along with close-up details. The reference dates, which cover world events such as World War II, and art historical references such as Picasso's Blue Period, are included at the back.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>At first glance, Alison Rossiter's work seems magical, a kind of alchemical work: a transformation of matter...But Rossiter's work is also an archaeology, to find vestiges of the past, to resurrect a sunken history, to do forensic work on the history of paper, to establish communion with the men who, handling the same paper 50 years ago, left their imprints there.--Red Glasses "Le Monde"<br><br>Elegant, conceptually expansive [...] The cameraless pictures she produces may be depopulated, but they are by no means without subjects [...] something might yet still be recovered from what at first seems to be nothing at all.--Jeffrey Kastner "Artforum"<br><br>[Rossiter] collects the discarded, going back into history, and celebrates the physicality of her materials.--Hilarie Sheets "1stdibs"<br><br>The consistent strength of [Rossiter's] work is the ease with which it produces abstractions that seem simple and familiar, only to reveal shortly thereafter the complex chain of accident, chance, and decision-making at its source.--Zach Ritter "Brooklyn Rail"<br>
Cheapest price in the interval: 55.99 on October 27, 2021
Most expensive price in the interval: 55.99 on November 8, 2021
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