archive
Shocked
My Mother, Schiaparelli, and Me
The author shares the lessons about womanhood and personal style she learned from both her mother, an upper-middle-class New Yorker who was the polished hostess at her family's garment district restaurant, and Elsa Schiaparelli, the outrageous, iconoclastic Italian fashion designer.
News and Reviews
Things Come Apart
A Teardown Manual for Modern Living
Fifty everyday objects, from an SLR camera to an espresso machine, appear as though they've been exploded and frozen in midair, offering an intricate, piece-piece overview of the inner workings and elegance of each object's design. 20,000 first printing.
News and Reviews
New York City of Trees
With photographs and narratives, Benjamin Swett tells the stories of 60 trees, in all five of New York City boroughs.
News and Reviews
Studio Thinking
The Real Benefits of Arts Education
News and Reviews
A Period of Juvenile Prosperity
News and Reviews
Unsettled / Desasosiego
Children in a World of Gangs / Los Ninos en un Mundo de las Pandillas
News and Reviews
William Klein
ABC
"Born in New York in 1928, William Klein is one of the leading photographers of the postwar era, as well as an influential filmmaker, painter, and graphic artist. This astonishing book, selected and designed by Klein himself, captures the essence of his life's work. It includes selections from his powerful photo books on New York, Moscow, Rome, Tokyo, and Paris; his dynamic fashion photography that used the city as a stage for glamour; stills and posters from his bitingly satirical films, including his send up of fashion magazines, Who Are You, Polly Magoo; and the graphically powerful painted contact sheets that he has exhibited around the world. Klein, whose achievement puts him on a level with Robert Frank, Richard Avedon, and Irving Penn, lives in Paris and is revered in Europe. This is the first comprehensive book on his work published in the United States in twenty years. "--
News and Reviews
Philip Treacy
Irish milliner Philip Treacy is the subject of a book of photography by Kevin Davies.
News and Reviews
This Is the Day
The March on Washington
Compiles the photographs taken by Leonard Freed of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, during which Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech.
News and Reviews
The Hare With Amber Eyes
A Hidden Inheritance
Traces the parallel stories of 19th century art patron Charles Ephrussi and his unique collection of 264 miniature netsuke — Japanese ivory carvings — documenting Ephrussi's relationship with Marcel Proust and the impact of the Holocaust on his cosmopolitan family.NPR Bestseller
News and Reviews
Grand Central
How A Train Station Transformed America
For Grand Central's 100th anniversary, New York Times reporter Sam Roberts offers an illustrated history of the celebrated Manhattan transit hub, including amusing stories, insider information about movies filmed there and hidden passageways.
News and Reviews
The Lost Carving
A Journey to the Heart of Making
The author of Grinling Gibbons and the Art of Carving recounts his career as a woodcarver and his path to becoming a forefront practitioner of the Baroque artist's forgotten technique. Esterly also traces the challenging and philosophically passionate year he spent replacing a Gibbons masterpiece that was destroyed in a fire at Henry VIII's Hampton Court Palace.
News and Reviews
Detroit City Is the Place to Be
The Afterlife of an American Metropolis
Mark Binelli traces Detroit's demise and recovery efforts, evaluating the plans of urban developers, speculators, politicians, agriculturalists and utopian environmentalists to transform Detroit into a viable, desegregated and economically diverse post-industrial region.
News and Reviews
Sophie Calle
The Address Book
After finding a lost address book, the artist sets out to understand its owner by randomly interviewing contacts to learn more about the personality and past of its owner.












