Olaf Nicolai: Faites le travail qu’accomplit le soleil

Posted in Editions, Exhibitions, Motto Berlin store, photography, writing on March 11th, 2011
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Olaf Nicolai – Faites le travail qu’accomplit le soleil

48 Pages
Designed by HIT London/ Berlin
Leipzig 2011

The publication “fait le travail qu’accomplit le soleil” was published to accompany the exhibition from Olaf Nicolai in the kestnergesellschaft, Hanover. It translates the topics and the vocabulary of the exhibition in the space of the book: A tour of the exhibition as a comic. Essays on the work of Olaf Nicolai Anne von der Heiden, and Hans-Hagen Hildebrandt, Monika Szewczyk and Marc Ries.

28.00 €

Available for Distribution

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Nothing Important Will Come by Martin Kohout

Posted in Motto Berlin store, photography on March 10th, 2011
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Collection of twenty-three manipulated found photographs by Martin Kohout.

Edition of 19.

D 17€
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Available for distribution.

Susanne Bürner. Leaves

Posted in Motto Berlin store, photography on March 8th, 2011
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“Leaves” was shot in a public park in London. The video shows a meadow surrounded by trees as its theatrical protagonist. Susanne Bürner has conceived a publication of lose leaves in the nature of this spectacle. The publication provides reference material shifting between different formats, between, painting, film and landscape.
Thirty copies are accompanied by a silver gelatine photograph representing the film location at a time of the year when there’re almost no more leaves. Three exclusive editions are accompanied each by 5 silver gelatine photographs each with the characters of the video, the leaves, now dry. All hand-printed photographs (20,5 x 27 cm) are signed and numbered by the artist (prices on request).

Author(s): Anne-Sophie Dinant, Doreen Mende, Tina Hedwig Kaiser, Erika Fischer-Lichte, Roger Turner.
Design: Susanne Bürner et Daniela Burger
Published by Boa Books

D 10€
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Erft Book. Ludomir Franczak.

Posted in photography, writing on March 4th, 2011
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Erft Book
Ludomir Franczak

This is an identity project. I want to reveal the family secret, according to which, my real grandfather was a Hungarian doctor named Erft. It is a complicated story from the II World War, which my grandmother- Wanda told her son (my father)- Antoni in a secret. This is a story which little pieces pass by my ears from the beginning of my childhood. My grandmother died in 1996, but she left some documents. My aunt- Bozena who was with her in Budapest in 1944 is still alive…
I want to reveal the real story- by searching Wanda’s papers, looking for some historical documents, talking to Bozena, and looking for the doctor’s family. In the same time I’m interested in the process of remembrance. I want to investigate how the historical facts are being remembered, and modified in a climat of family secret- something whispered behind the closed door.
The story of my grandmother’s escape from Poland in an ambulance- smuggled through the Polish- Hungarian border by her beloved, then living in a camp for Poles in Budapest, finally giving birth to my father in a work camp in Dessau in march 1945 is a great movie story- yet it is just one of many war stories. In the same time it is the story of my family, of my identity.
The purpose of my residence in Budapest is obvious- I want to find my grandfather, my “lost” family. In the same time I’m interested in revealing of the whole process of searching and creating a legend from real story. I’ll collect the documents, record all my conversations with family members in Poland, and people that I’ll find on my way. I also want to create a hypothetical bedroom of my grandmother Wanda, and the Erft grandfather. What if they lived together after the war (Wanda was learning Hungarian in Budapest)? How would it be? How would they home look like? Would I be brought to the world if my father was born in Hungary?

D 12€
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Brussels Beauties

Posted in Motto Berlin store, photography on March 4th, 2011
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Brussels Beauties

Collected & edited by Erik Kessels.
The third in the found photography series collecting images of attractiveness from around the world. After Bangkok Beauties and Bombay Beauties, Kessels focuses on the smaller scale story of one Belgian girl. Unaware of her own prettiness, she turns a pensive face to the camera in image after image. The repetitive pictures build a quietly intense atmosphere, like stills from an old movie. We are left to speculate on almost everything about her: age, period when the photos were made, exact location (the Belgian capital of the title is absent inside). Only the consistency of her ambiguous expression is a certainty. A mini Mona Lisa, she seems alternately sadly happy, and happily sad, a strangely complex and mature set of emotions for one of her years.
Black & white, 170 x 255 mm, 40 pages, soft cover, edition of 500.

D 15€
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Bombay Beauties

Posted in Motto Berlin store, photography on March 4th, 2011
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Bombay Beauties

Collected & edited by Erik Kessels. A sequel to Bangkok Beauties, this collection of found photographs comprises a selection of pieces discovered by Erik Kessels in Mumbai. It depicts a rich mix of ordinary subjects, from hairdressers’ models to family shots to wedding images. Mixed in with this cross section of typical folk are rare shots of Bollywood actors and stars. Taken together, these show the rich diversity of the city, hinting at its untold stories and lives. Black & white, 170 x 225 mm, 60 pages, soft cover, edition of 500.

D 15€
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Bangkok Beauties

Posted in Motto Berlin store, photography on March 4th, 2011
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Bangkok Beauties

Beauty captures the eye as well as the imagination. There is something naturally alluring and distracting about loveliness; something in its purity, its naivete, its promise and its hopeful inspiration. We all tend to gravitate with passion towards the ideal. In Bangkok Beauties, Erik Kessels provides a look at a specific photographic series that depicts attractive women during a beauty contest sometime ago. Here we see the contestants displaying themselves in such a way as to be judged by their poise, their posture and their most of all by their appearance. The photographs have become even more precious and lovely in their decay. Over the years, the pictures have deteriorated, been scratched and suffered weather all of which serves to enhance their beauty both as images and as objects. In fact, we can hold these rescued beauties and see them front and back thereby join in the admiring contest that continues even still. Black & white, 170 x 225 mm, 28 pages, soft cover.

 

D 15€
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American Zoo

Posted in Motto Berlin store, photography on March 4th, 2011
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American Zoo

Collected, edited and designed by Jennifer Skupin, text by Zack McDonald.
Aristotle once observed that “man is by nature a political animal.” Art Director Jennifer Skupin takes this age-old profundity quite literally, compiling images of American presidents and the animals which they most resemble. It turns out that Fillmore is a mallard, Grant is a grizzly and Obama a llama. For all those hungry for the ultimate series in presidential non-human doppelgangers, American Zoo is the feast you’ve been awaiting. Black & white, 170 x 255 mm, 100 pages, soft cover, edition of 500.

 

D 14.50€
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Marie Sommer. Teufelsberg

Posted in Motto Berlin store, photography on March 3rd, 2011
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Teufelsberg
Marie Sommer

Text:
Jean-Yves Jouannais
Teufelsberg (mountain devil), is an artificial hill located southwest of Berlin, overlooking the city. Amusement park very popular with young Berliners, this hill was built after the Second World War with the remnants of the city after the Allied bombing. An estimated 30 million cubic meters of rubble piled mass there, the equivalent of 400,000 buildings. The hill rises on the site of the University of Nazi war which had been designed by the architect of the Third Reich, Albert Speer, and half done. As after the war, it was difficult to totally destroy the building riddled with underground bunkers, the German authorities decided to bury him and make him disappear under an artificial hill. The hill was then covered with trees, and used during the winter ski run in the 60s and 70s. During the Cold War, was built at the top center of U.S. espionage radar to listen to communications of the Soviet bloc in East Berlin.

She won the contest SFR Jeunes Talents – BAL 2009.
Coproducer : Le Bal/SFR
Released : September, 15th 2010
Collection : Hors Collection
English/French
ISBN 13 : 978-2-35046-197-7
Format : 210 x 290
72 pages
Paperback with flaps
41 color and black and white photos

D 22€
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PREMIER EN SPORT ET EN CHANT Nº0

Posted in Motto Berlin store, photography, Zines on March 2nd, 2011
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PREMIER EN SPORT ET EN CHANT Nº0

Premier en sport et en chant is a new journal showcasing emerging photography.

Extent: 56 Pages
Trim size: 21 x 27 cm
Black and white laser print on Cyclus 115gr,
Cover on Cyclus 170 gr
Binding: Softcover, saddle stitched
Text: French / English
First run of 100 copies
Self Published

 

D 4€
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