dinsdag 26 december 2017

Rue Vue Groupe de l'Immobilière-Constructions de Paris 1970 Jean-Louis Bloch-Lainé M.+M. Auer Collection Company Photography


Jean-Louis Bloch-Lainé - Rue Vue
Groupe de l'Immobilière-Constructions de Paris, 1970.
Quarto (32 x 24.5 cm) Limited first edition of 600 copies. Very nice firm book printed by Draeger in Montrouge, referenced in the M. + M. Auer collection. p. 522
Rare copy signed by Jean-Louis Bloch-Lainé.
Grey printed editor paperboard, the casing is missing.


FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, 2008
802 Photobooks from the M+M Auer Collection

How many great photo books would you guess have been published so far? Between Parr/Badger, Roth 101 and Open Book there are about 500 books featured collectively, but how many more were overlooked, unknown, or met the editing axe due to subjectivity? One thousand?

A new book called 802 Photobooks from the M + M Auer Collection brings a few more obscure titles to light. Michele and Michel Auer have over 20,000 photo books in their personal library and this selection of 802 is meant to show the variety of choice available above and beyond the other books of photobooks.

When I heard of this book, my first thought was “802 books? Great…the more the merrier, time to give the ABE search engines a workout” but upon seeing a copy, I am starting to think that after 500, there is a big drop off from the look of things.

I have to say from the look of things because one of the biggest drawbacks to this book is that it provides no information about the content other than a thumbnail photograph of the cover or a spread, the physical size and publishing info. So this is a judge from the cover, do your own research approach that may have you spending money simply due to a book’s cover image.

802 Photobooks is very small at only four by six inches but the two inches worth of pages gives it a decent heft. The printing is adequate even though the images are not much bigger than 35mm contacts.

Don’t get me wrong, I enjoy looking through this as much as many of the other books on photo books but I really do not see much of a point without the educational benefit of descriptions of the content. This may be the closest you get to porn for photobook geeks.




























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