Exquisite Corpses is the name of a game invented by André Breton and a few other Surrealists in the '20s. You might know it already; each player takes turns drawing or writing on a sheet of... read more
The Delos Symposia was an annual summit for the greatest architectural minds of the era. It ran from 1963-75 and was masterminded by the charismatic Greek architect-planner Constantinos Doxi... read more
Another fine catalogue from Piano Nobile. Gold print embossed on a soft, textured cover. 80 colour illustrations inside, accompanied by catalogue entries, essays and Sickert's own letters.
“I see gardens as works of art made of living entities that change with the seasons and the passing of time”: Marianne Majerus is a leading contemporary photographer of gardens who has w... read more
Issue Four features Setsuko Klossowska de Rola, Kate Moss, Philip Treacy, Kate Stamps, Edward Rollitt, Brett Robinson, Jonathan Schilder Brown, Trevor Cheney, Lucian Freud and Wendy Nichols,... read more
This posthumous publication is based on the revisionist work Stamp did at the end of his life, arguing that interwar Britain was not just an era of intensifying modernism but saw an emergenc... read more
From the 50s to the 70s, Tom Wilson produced a dazzling line-up of folk, rock and jazz artists: Sun Ra, Bob Dylan, Nico, John Coltrane, . This is the first book about him. It features essays... read more
Beautifully illustrated publication on the garden of the recently restored Rubenshuis in Antwerp, including a delightful florilegium of plants that would have grown there. Includes a recipe ... read more
Quite possibly the cutest recipe book in existence... The brilliant Tenderbooks have published this collection of recipes from around the world, printed by Pagemasters on a limited run of 20... read more
Anyone who read Christopher de Hamel's last book, or Alexandra Lapierre's novel Belle Greene, will know that the letters from Pierpont Morgan's mixed-race librarian/buyer to Berenson will be... read more
Issue 4 of Ruth Guilding’s annual bonanza of architecture, interiors and off-beat ways of life celebrates Stanway and Newbiggin, Samuel Palmer and green men, folk art and fashion, the witc... read more
This second issue 'began as a modest project about awful food and quickly spiralled out of control'... The worst Michelin-starred restaurants in the world, a guide to artificial sweetners, a... read more
Astute literary and social criticism, exploring the evolution of African American literature during the cold war by addressing their unique positionality - alienated from both the left and r... read more
An anthology about radical gardens - poems, essays, images, polemics. Contributors include Alys Fowler, Philip Hoare, Jamaica Kincaid, Jeremy Lee, Ana Mendieta, Ian Patterson, J.H. Prynne an... read more
Dorothy Dean was one of the few African American women of the New York 60s underground scene. She starred in six of Andy Warhol's films. Patti Smith calls her 'small, black and brilliant,' i... read more
The first issue of a new, massive (almost twice the dimensions of a standard magazine) bi-annual publication. Each issue revolves around a central text - this time by AK Blakemore - with oth... read more
Narrated by Mozart in three periods of his life: as a child in London, as an angst-ridden youth in Paris, and as a man in sight of his own death in Leipzig. Charlatans and aristocrats abound... read more
Buzzati, a journalist for much of his life, was celebrated for turning the events of mid-century Italy and beyond into absurdist, even nightmarish stories, gathered together here into a new ... read more
Rey Conquer was translator-in-residence at Holocaust Centre North, where they explored the personal archives of people persecuted by the Nazis. Expecting to find instances of poetic language... read more