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Orejana Outfit: Arizona’s Historic O RO Ranch 1993-2013
We are pleased to announce the publication of Orejana Outfit: Arizona’s Historic O RO Ranch 1993-2013, published by Kathy McCraine. The vast 257,000-acre O RO Ranch, just south of Prescott, Arizona, started out as a Spanish Land Grant. It is closed to the public. As Jay Dusard, esteemed photographer of the West, writes in the…
Read Morewe launched a new department!
After months of hard work and fine-tuning, we are honored to announce the launch of our new department: Building, Layout and Design. For this, we are deeply indebted to Chevalier Tony Clark and, the late, Dr. William Emboden, for having taken a chance on our budding talent, Fabiola Zambon, entrusting to her the…
Read MoreBuenos Aires Book Fair
At the beginning of May, I attended the Buenos Aires Book Fair for the second year in a row. The book fair, which touts itself as the most important annual literary event in the Spanish speaking world, lasts for nearly three weeks and receives well upwards of one million visitors every year. The fair buildings…
Read MoreA Tribute to Dana Levy, 1938-2017, Legendary Designer & Good Friend and Half of Perpetua Press
I confirmed my first project with Perpetua Press in the waning years of the Twentieth Century, a time of faxes and typewriters and time that seemed to move more slowly than it does now. I knew nothing about the subject matter (Ainu art) and would not have recognized an Ainu if he walked up to…
Read MoreNotable discoveries at the LA Art Book Fair
The artist Yoshitomo Nara, and his publisher, Blum and Poe, LA/NY/Tokyo (www.blumandpoe.com). One of Nara’s recurring themes is a small girl with wide, intense eyes. Her facial structure resembles Mei from My Neighbor Totoro, from Studio Ghibli. Put Mei togther with Nara’s girl and you get a cute but probably ferocious kid, who looks like…
Read MoreLA Art Book Fair
I attended Printed Matter’s LA Art Book Fair on Friday. Getting there through the Friday traffic was an unbelievable ordeal (praise be to WAZE, however, for navigating the congested streets). Held at the Geffen Contemporary at MOCA, the fair was as crowded as the highways outside. I remember my surprise when I attended the fair…
Read MoreThe Vienna International Hotel in Shenzhen: imperial influences
On my trip to Shenzhen, I was also quite curious about the hotel I stayed in. It was called the Vienna International Hotel. As befitting Vienna’s station in the cultural world, there was a musical theme running through the hotel, from treble clefs in the polished granite to embossed treble clef patterns in the white…
Read MoreBustling Shenzhen Book City in the center of the city of 20 million
It is a genuine emporium of the printed book. From the looks of things, the intellectual future of the country is secure in the hands of the youth, many of them female. I was surprised at the breadth of English books in translation, from biographies of captains of industry like Elon Musk, to Donald Trump,…
Read MoreMaking Lemonade
As part of the Los Angeles Airport’s long overdue rejuvenation (it’s hopeful motto, LAX IS HAPPENING) the airport has brought in some new tenants. One notable improvement in the Delta terminal is lemonade restaurant, along the terminal’s dim rampway. At the front of the long space, lemonade’s script logo is realized in meter high letters,…
Read MoreSHENZHEN: A TRAVELOGUE FROM CHINA
Sixty Second Review SHENZHEN: A TRAVELOGUE FROM CHINA By Guy Delisle Publisher: Drawn & Quarterly Books I came across this little book in an exhibit of graphic novels at the Santa Monica Library. The word Shenzhen leaped out at me across the lobby because, although an inordinate number of 4-color books are printed in Shenzhen…
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