Incoming
by Richard Mosse
Photographs: Richard Mosse
Text: Giorgio Agamben, Richard Mosse
Publisher: MACK Books
567 pages
Pictures: 280 tritone plates
Year: February 2017
ISBN: 978-1-910164-77-8
Comments: OTA-bound paperback with metallic silkscreen cover image and black painted edges, Metallic tritone printing throughout, 17.5 cm x 19.7 cm
At a moment when the world is facing the world's largest refugee and migration crisis since the Second World War, Incoming by Irish artist and Deutsche Börse Photography Prize winner Richard Mosse deals with the major humanitarian and political plight of our time, the displacement of millions due to war, persecution and climate change. With illuminating texts by Mosse and the philosopher Giorgio Agamben, the 576-page book combines film stills from the artist's latest video work made in collaboration with electronic composer Ben Frost and cinematographer Trevor Tweeten - a haunting and searing multi-channel film installation, accompanied by a visceral soundtrack. Journeys made by refugees and migrants across the Middle East, North Africa, and Europe are captured with a new weapons-grade surveillance technology that can detect the human body from 30.3km. Blind to skin colour, this camera technology registers only the contours of relative heat difference within a given scene, foregrounding the fragile human body's struggle for survival in hostile enviroments.
As Mosse writes in his essay, "the camera carries a certain aesthetic violence, dehumanizing the subject, portaying people in zombie form as monstrous, stripping the individual from the body and portraying a human as mere biological trace." Alluding literally and metaphorically a hypothermia, mortality, epidemic, global warming, weapons targeting, border surveillance, xenophobia, and the "bare life" of stateless people, Mosse's use of a military telephoto camera serves as an attempt to reveal its internal logic - to see the way missiles see. Following the narrative sequence of the film, the book presents still frames from footage of a live battle inside Syria in which a US aircraft strafes IS positions on the ground, to scences showing refugees boarding rescue boats off the coast of Libya or gathered along the shores of Turkey under cover of darkness, or making the dangerous journey through the Sahara Desert, and the burning of the Jungle refugee camp. Like the film, the artist's book bears witness to chapters in recent world events - mediated through weapoms camera technology - while also shedding light on the ethical, technological, logistical and aesthetic issues involved in creating this major new work.
More books by Richard Mosse
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VOTE NO. 1 (special edition - signed - last copies)
by Mark Duffy
Euro 85 -
Flaming Grace (signed)
by Vivian Keulards
Euro 40 -
i (signed)
by Eamonn Doyle
sold out -
I went to the worst of bars hoping to.... (signed - last copy)
by Ciáran Óg Arnold
Euro 55 -
Border Roads 1990 –1994
by Tony O'Shea
Euro 9.50 -
Photographs 1997 – 2017
by Hannah Starkey
Euro 49.50
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Continuum (signed- last copy)
by Gabriela Morawetz
Euro 80 -
Gor'Kaya Luna (signed)
by Vladimir Besson
Euro 50 -
Proxemics (book + print)
by Renato D'Agostin
sold out
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Ville De Calais (last copy)
by Henk Wildschut
Euro 66 -
Fremdenzimmer (signed - last copies)
by Gerhard Maurer
Euro 27.50 -
Immo Refugee
by Defrost Studio
Euro 17.50 -
Fluchtwege - Der Herbst 2015 in Österreich (signed)
by Florian Rainer
Euro 35 -
Transit
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Der Riss (signed)
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Random selection from the Virtual bookshelf josefchladek.com
Incoming
by Richard Mosse
Photographs: Richard Mosse
Text: Giorgio Agamben, Richard Mosse
Publisher: MACK Books
567 pages
Pictures: 280 tritone plates
Year: February 2017
ISBN: 978-1-910164-77-8
Comments: OTA-bound paperback with metallic silkscreen cover image and black painted edges, Metallic tritone printing throughout, 17.5 cm x 19.7 cm
At a moment when the world is facing the world's largest refugee and migration crisis since the Second World War, Incoming by Irish artist and Deutsche Börse Photography Prize winner Richard Mosse deals with the major humanitarian and political plight of our time, the displacement of millions due to war, persecution and climate change. With illuminating texts by Mosse and the philosopher Giorgio Agamben, the 576-page book combines film stills from the artist's latest video work made in collaboration with electronic composer Ben Frost and cinematographer Trevor Tweeten - a haunting and searing multi-channel film installation, accompanied by a visceral soundtrack. Journeys made by refugees and migrants across the Middle East, North Africa, and Europe are captured with a new weapons-grade surveillance technology that can detect the human body from 30.3km. Blind to skin colour, this camera technology registers only the contours of relative heat difference within a given scene, foregrounding the fragile human body's struggle for survival in hostile enviroments.
As Mosse writes in his essay, "the camera carries a certain aesthetic violence, dehumanizing the subject, portaying people in zombie form as monstrous, stripping the individual from the body and portraying a human as mere biological trace." Alluding literally and metaphorically a hypothermia, mortality, epidemic, global warming, weapons targeting, border surveillance, xenophobia, and the "bare life" of stateless people, Mosse's use of a military telephoto camera serves as an attempt to reveal its internal logic - to see the way missiles see. Following the narrative sequence of the film, the book presents still frames from footage of a live battle inside Syria in which a US aircraft strafes IS positions on the ground, to scences showing refugees boarding rescue boats off the coast of Libya or gathered along the shores of Turkey under cover of darkness, or making the dangerous journey through the Sahara Desert, and the burning of the Jungle refugee camp. Like the film, the artist's book bears witness to chapters in recent world events - mediated through weapoms camera technology - while also shedding light on the ethical, technological, logistical and aesthetic issues involved in creating this major new work.
More books by Richard Mosse
more books tagged »Irish« | >> see all
-
VOTE NO. 1 (special edition - signed - last copies)
by Mark Duffy
Euro 85 -
Flaming Grace (signed)
by Vivian Keulards
Euro 40 -
i (signed)
by Eamonn Doyle
sold out -
I went to the worst of bars hoping to.... (signed - last copy)
by Ciáran Óg Arnold
Euro 55 -
Border Roads 1990 –1994
by Tony O'Shea
Euro 9.50 -
Photographs 1997 – 2017
by Hannah Starkey
Euro 49.50
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-
Continuum (signed- last copy)
by Gabriela Morawetz
Euro 80 -
Gor'Kaya Luna (signed)
by Vladimir Besson
Euro 50 -
Proxemics (book + print)
by Renato D'Agostin
sold out
more books tagged »refugee« | >> see all
-
Ville De Calais (last copy)
by Henk Wildschut
Euro 66 -
Fremdenzimmer (signed - last copies)
by Gerhard Maurer
Euro 27.50 -
Immo Refugee
by Defrost Studio
Euro 17.50 -
Fluchtwege - Der Herbst 2015 in Österreich (signed)
by Florian Rainer
Euro 35 -
Transit
by Gerhard Maurer
Euro 5.00 -
Der Riss (signed)
by Carlos Spottorno
Euro 39
Random selection from the Virtual bookshelf josefchladek.com
Incoming
by Richard Mosse
Photographs: Richard Mosse
Text: Giorgio Agamben, Richard Mosse
Publisher: MACK Books
567 pages
Pictures: 280 tritone plates
Year: February 2017
ISBN: 978-1-910164-77-8
Comments: OTA-bound paperback with metallic silkscreen cover image and black painted edges, Metallic tritone printing throughout, 17.5 cm x 19.7 cm
At a moment when the world is facing the world's largest refugee and migration crisis since the Second World War, Incoming by Irish artist and Deutsche Börse Photography Prize winner Richard Mosse deals with the major humanitarian and political plight of our time, the displacement of millions due to war, persecution and climate change. With illuminating texts by Mosse and the philosopher Giorgio Agamben, the 576-page book combines film stills from the artist's latest video work made in collaboration with electronic composer Ben Frost and cinematographer Trevor Tweeten - a haunting and searing multi-channel film installation, accompanied by a visceral soundtrack. Journeys made by refugees and migrants across the Middle East, North Africa, and Europe are captured with a new weapons-grade surveillance technology that can detect the human body from 30.3km. Blind to skin colour, this camera technology registers only the contours of relative heat difference within a given scene, foregrounding the fragile human body's struggle for survival in hostile enviroments.
As Mosse writes in his essay, "the camera carries a certain aesthetic violence, dehumanizing the subject, portaying people in zombie form as monstrous, stripping the individual from the body and portraying a human as mere biological trace." Alluding literally and metaphorically a hypothermia, mortality, epidemic, global warming, weapons targeting, border surveillance, xenophobia, and the "bare life" of stateless people, Mosse's use of a military telephoto camera serves as an attempt to reveal its internal logic - to see the way missiles see. Following the narrative sequence of the film, the book presents still frames from footage of a live battle inside Syria in which a US aircraft strafes IS positions on the ground, to scences showing refugees boarding rescue boats off the coast of Libya or gathered along the shores of Turkey under cover of darkness, or making the dangerous journey through the Sahara Desert, and the burning of the Jungle refugee camp. Like the film, the artist's book bears witness to chapters in recent world events - mediated through weapoms camera technology - while also shedding light on the ethical, technological, logistical and aesthetic issues involved in creating this major new work.
More books by Richard Mosse
more books tagged »Irish« | >> see all
-
VOTE NO. 1 (special edition - signed - last copies)
by Mark Duffy
Euro 85 -
Flaming Grace (signed)
by Vivian Keulards
Euro 40 -
i (signed)
by Eamonn Doyle
sold out -
I went to the worst of bars hoping to.... (signed - last copy)
by Ciáran Óg Arnold
Euro 55 -
Border Roads 1990 –1994
by Tony O'Shea
Euro 9.50 -
Photographs 1997 – 2017
by Hannah Starkey
Euro 49.50
more books tagged »silverprint« | >> see all
-
Continuum (signed- last copy)
by Gabriela Morawetz
Euro 80 -
Gor'Kaya Luna (signed)
by Vladimir Besson
Euro 50 -
Proxemics (book + print)
by Renato D'Agostin
sold out
more books tagged »refugee« | >> see all
-
Ville De Calais (last copy)
by Henk Wildschut
Euro 66 -
Fremdenzimmer (signed - last copies)
by Gerhard Maurer
Euro 27.50 -
Immo Refugee
by Defrost Studio
Euro 17.50 -
Fluchtwege - Der Herbst 2015 in Österreich (signed)
by Florian Rainer
Euro 35 -
Transit
by Gerhard Maurer
Euro 5.00 -
Der Riss (signed)
by Carlos Spottorno
Euro 39
Random selection from the Virtual bookshelf josefchladek.com