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Berlin Stories Set
Eine Bibliothek der Hauptstadtblicke
€ 40.00
VAT included.
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calculated at checkout
Editor-in-Chief: Nadine Barth
Graphic Design: Julia Wagner, grafikanstalt
Artist: Michael Schulz, Jason McGlade, Ralph Mecke, Annette Hauschild
German, English
February 2022,
640
Pages, 426 Photos
Hardcover
150mm x
200mm
ISBN:
978-3-7757-5327-2
You'll find all genres of photography here, from classic street photography to personal sketches to staged portrait series. In a handy pocket-sized format, this set is a library of images of the capital, taken by the most prominet photographers working in the city today.
The set includes the following volumes
Jason McGlade. Walking the Dog: This volume shows photographs by the British photographer Jason McGlade, who has been supplying magazines such as Hekmak, Tank, Intersection, and the Sunday Times Style Magazine for years. He also launched his own Frisbee-shaped magazine—FreeStyleMagazine—and is a co-organizer of worldwide Frisbee events. His Australian cattle dog Ozzy is always at his side, exploring McGlade’s adopted home town of Berlin and meeting bikers, skaters, and slackers.
Michael Schulz. @berlinstagram: Photographer Michael Schulz is who is behind the famous instagram account @berlinstagram. He is interested in the city's forms, colors, textures, weird niches, bright light, and the humor of the moment. For this book, Michael Schulz has opened up his archive and selected his favorites as well as images not published ever before.
Annette Hauschild. Last Days of Disco: Annette Hauschild is a storyteller—one who gets close to things and opens up to people; one who discovers places that enchant her, and as a result, the places that enchant her viewers. This volume compiles three black-and-white series that deal with the changes in society that occurred after the fall of the Iron Curtain, as well as with old and new West Berlin.
Ralph Mecke. Naked Jungle: Pictures by the fashion and portrait photographer Ralph Mecke are dark, mysterious, and charged with an idiosyncratic energy: his eye turns familiar places into new domains that open up to the imagination and serve as setting for the Who's Who of Berlin's cultural scene. This volume is as much a book as it is a concept album.
Ed Broner. Vagabondage Diary: This book plunges headlong into life: specifically, Ed Broner’s nightlife, which is presented here in a kind of photo album-cum-journal. It is a cynical, atmospherically intoxicating commentary on the desire for and addiction to pleasure, the presentation of luxury labels, and a selfie culture in love with details.
Photographer MICHAEL SCHULZ is interested in the forms, colors, textures, weird niches, bright light, and the humor of the moment. He published his first smartphone photo in fall 2010 on Instagram. His channel, Berlinstagram, grew rapidly and soon became one of the most popular German accounts, with nearly half-a-million fans. In the meantime, Schulz has been using other types of cameras to provide material for both his own channel and other people’s channels, too. He is a company consultant and creates visual marketing campaigns, traveling around the world for his assignments.
She is a storyteller—one who gets close to things and opens up to people; one who discovers places that enchant her, and as a result, the places that enchant her viewers. Ever since ANNETTE HAUSCHILD (b. in Giessen) moved to Berlin to study at the Lette-Verein, the capital has often been a theme for her photojournalism and for her personal projects.
The set includes the following volumes
Jason McGlade. Walking the Dog: This volume shows photographs by the British photographer Jason McGlade, who has been supplying magazines such as Hekmak, Tank, Intersection, and the Sunday Times Style Magazine for years. He also launched his own Frisbee-shaped magazine—FreeStyleMagazine—and is a co-organizer of worldwide Frisbee events. His Australian cattle dog Ozzy is always at his side, exploring McGlade’s adopted home town of Berlin and meeting bikers, skaters, and slackers.
Michael Schulz. @berlinstagram: Photographer Michael Schulz is who is behind the famous instagram account @berlinstagram. He is interested in the city's forms, colors, textures, weird niches, bright light, and the humor of the moment. For this book, Michael Schulz has opened up his archive and selected his favorites as well as images not published ever before.
Annette Hauschild. Last Days of Disco: Annette Hauschild is a storyteller—one who gets close to things and opens up to people; one who discovers places that enchant her, and as a result, the places that enchant her viewers. This volume compiles three black-and-white series that deal with the changes in society that occurred after the fall of the Iron Curtain, as well as with old and new West Berlin.
Ralph Mecke. Naked Jungle: Pictures by the fashion and portrait photographer Ralph Mecke are dark, mysterious, and charged with an idiosyncratic energy: his eye turns familiar places into new domains that open up to the imagination and serve as setting for the Who's Who of Berlin's cultural scene. This volume is as much a book as it is a concept album.
Ed Broner. Vagabondage Diary: This book plunges headlong into life: specifically, Ed Broner’s nightlife, which is presented here in a kind of photo album-cum-journal. It is a cynical, atmospherically intoxicating commentary on the desire for and addiction to pleasure, the presentation of luxury labels, and a selfie culture in love with details.
Photographer MICHAEL SCHULZ is interested in the forms, colors, textures, weird niches, bright light, and the humor of the moment. He published his first smartphone photo in fall 2010 on Instagram. His channel, Berlinstagram, grew rapidly and soon became one of the most popular German accounts, with nearly half-a-million fans. In the meantime, Schulz has been using other types of cameras to provide material for both his own channel and other people’s channels, too. He is a company consultant and creates visual marketing campaigns, traveling around the world for his assignments.
She is a storyteller—one who gets close to things and opens up to people; one who discovers places that enchant her, and as a result, the places that enchant her viewers. Ever since ANNETTE HAUSCHILD (b. in Giessen) moved to Berlin to study at the Lette-Verein, the capital has often been a theme for her photojournalism and for her personal projects.
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