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David Krut Publishing, |
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| Johannesburg 011 447-0627 / 011 880-5648 • Cape Town 021 685-0676 • New York 212 255-3094 | |||
Our bookstore is located at 140 Jan Smuts Avenue, Parkwood, Johannesburg. Our own titles as well as books from other South African and international publishers are available in the store and on this site. We are the sole distributors in southern Africa of books from Tate Publishing (UK), Assouline (USA), Nazraeli (USA). We specialise in books on contemporary art, architecture, graphic design and monographs.
White Casket
In The White Casket, Japanese artist Miwa Yanagi has created a bizarre fantasy world inhabited by department store “elevator girls.” In upscale Japanese department stores, the elevator girl performs the role of a hostess, directing
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Atmos
Naoya Hatakeyama is a leading figure in contemporary Japanese art. The subject of numerous books and exhibitions, Hatakeyama’s previous
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Yumiko
Andreas Müller-Pohle has created a portrait comprised of eleven near-identical pictures of the Japanese Yumiko, culminating in an
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True
It had all the appearances of what it meant to be carved out from the outer of its interior but truly it was a masquerade a falsity shrouded in
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Cues
Sara Gilbert is a well known actor who has recently begun pursuing photography professionally. Cues comprises ten photographs made on
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High Fashion Crime Scenes
Melanie Pullen’s long-awaited first monograph, High Fashion Crime Scenes, presents her breathtakingly beautiful works based on vintage crime scene images, first-hand accounts, and documents Pullen mined from the files of the lapd. In 2002, drawn to the rich details and compelling stories preserved in the
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Retrospective Two
Published as a companion book to the artist’s Twenty Year Retrospective, Michael Kenna: Retrospective Two presents an overview of Kenna’s landscape photographs made between 1994 and 2004. Michael Kenna is arguably the
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Fried Waters
Fried Waters is a photographic poem about time and memory, place and labor, the symbolism of salt and the process by which it snaps from liquid into crystal. — from the Introduction by Mark Haworth-Booth
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How Beautiful this Place Can Be
South Africa is where Stuart O’Sullivan was raised, and where his family still lives. Growing up as a member of the white middle class, his childhood was one of affluence and privilege but, as he moved towards
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