<p>Thirteen one-page poems that particularize intriguing male characters in odd places by Barry Wallenstein with twenty-eight contrapuntal pictorial and street photographs by Barbara Rosenthal.</p><p></p><p>Barry Wallenstein says: In 2020 Xanadu Press published my chapbook&nbsp;<em>Time on the Move</em> a collaboration between my poems and surreal photographs by artist Barbara Rosenthal. The dominant theme of those poems as I neared my 80th&nbsp;year was age-appropriate: one's mortality through the passage of time.</p><p>Now five years later I'm still attached to those themes but&nbsp;have been able to escape them by developing character sketches. Parts of me are no doubt in many of these individuals but they are&nbsp;there without conscious decision. These characters are all fictitious&nbsp;but for the penultimate poem The Chief. I wish that one were a made-up character.</p><p></p><p>Barbara Rosenthal says: A l l p h o t o s a r e 3 5 m m f u l l - f r a m e s h o t b e t w e e n 1 9 7 0 - 2 0 2 5 t h e b l a c k- a n d - w h i t e s primarily on the streets of Manhattan the color everywhere else. The years and places are&nbsp;noted in their titles with file numbers as month.year.roll.frame or sometimes digitized&nbsp;index number. Very few of these have been published previously although several have been fabricated as 11 x 14 selenium toned gelatin silver editions of six and/or pigment prints.</p><p>It is unusual for me to make public my street photography. I usually publish and exhibit either surreal photographs as were included in&nbsp;<em>Time on the Move&nbsp;</em>Barry&nbsp;Wallenstein's first chapbook with Xanadu or surreal-to-conceptual wall works which&nbsp;incorporate them.</p><p>Needless to say I'm both grateful to Barry for asking me to collaborate once&nbsp;again and excited to be bringing out this somewhat hidden aspect of my work one that fits&nbsp;relatively neatly into the usual canon of photography.</p><p></p><p>About the Press: Xanadu Press&nbsp;i s t h e m i x e d i m a g e /t e x t - b a s e d o f t h e t w o i m p r i n t s p u b l i s h e d by invitation within Homo FuturusTM Editions at eMediaLoft.org. These are books in which pictures and texts are imaginative and visually linked. Our other imprint Washington Street&nbsp;Press produces visual art monographs and text-based books of fiction and non-fiction. Both&nbsp;are designed and edited by media artist/writer Barbara Rosenthal. Her periodic column of philosophy about the interconnection of art and artist&nbsp;<em>A Crack in the Sidewalk&nbsp;</em>has appeared in&nbsp;<em>Ragazine&nbsp;</em>and&nbsp;<em>Whitehot Magazine of Contemporary Art.&nbsp;</em>Her bookworks are in the collections of The Whitney MoMA Tate Berlin Kunstbibliotek Artpool Budapest et al and available from Printed Matter under the trademark she's used since 1982.</p><p>eMediaLoft.org is located in the neon-effused live-work loft Rosenthal shared with our late Director Emeritus Bill Creston within the Westbeth Arts Complex on the Hudson River in the Highline / West Village neighborhood of NYC. It is a privately funded loose consortium of artists and who create hard-to-place hard-to-categorize works primarily using replicable or recordable media (camera and electronic arts performance audio and writing) with a strong conceptual base and discernible philosophical perspective.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p>
Piracy-free
Assured Quality
Secure Transactions
Delivery Options
Please enter pincode to check delivery time.
*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.