Justine Kurland: This Train [signed + print]
Publisher: MACK BOOKS
Publication Date: 2024
Binding: Hardcover
Condition: As New
Signed: Signed by Artist
Leporello bound hardcover, embossed with 2 flaps and tipped-in image to front cover. 25.3 x 18.3cm, 102 pages. Includes a handmade print by the artist (20.3 x 16.4cm). Signed on verso, #818/1000. As new. Free U.S. shipping. This publication from Justine Kurland presents two interwoven narratives drawn from the road trips across the United States that she undertook with her young child between the years 2005 and 2010. Kurland re-appraises an interwoven set of paradigms which retain a tenacious grip on contemporary American life: the nuclear family, the open road, the violence of expansion, and the intractable force of the land itself.
Publisher: MACK BOOKS
Publication Date: 2024
Binding: Hardcover
Condition: As New
Signed: Signed by Artist
Leporello bound hardcover, embossed with 2 flaps and tipped-in image to front cover. 25.3 x 18.3cm, 102 pages. Includes a handmade print by the artist (20.3 x 16.4cm). Signed on verso, #818/1000. As new. Free U.S. shipping. This publication from Justine Kurland presents two interwoven narratives drawn from the road trips across the United States that she undertook with her young child between the years 2005 and 2010. Kurland re-appraises an interwoven set of paradigms which retain a tenacious grip on contemporary American life: the nuclear family, the open road, the violence of expansion, and the intractable force of the land itself.
Publisher: MACK BOOKS
Publication Date: 2024
Binding: Hardcover
Condition: As New
Signed: Signed by Artist
Leporello bound hardcover, embossed with 2 flaps and tipped-in image to front cover. 25.3 x 18.3cm, 102 pages. Includes a handmade print by the artist (20.3 x 16.4cm). Signed on verso, #818/1000. As new. Free U.S. shipping. This publication from Justine Kurland presents two interwoven narratives drawn from the road trips across the United States that she undertook with her young child between the years 2005 and 2010. Kurland re-appraises an interwoven set of paradigms which retain a tenacious grip on contemporary American life: the nuclear family, the open road, the violence of expansion, and the intractable force of the land itself.