Roe Ethridge: Shelter Island [signed]

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Publisher: MACK BOOKS
Publication Date: 2016
Binding: Soft cover
Book Condition: As New
Signed: Signed by Artist
Singer sewn paperback. 32 pages, 15 colour plates. 23.8 x 32.3 cm. Signed on colophon page. As new. Shelter Island comprises a body of work made by Roe Ethridge during a summer stay in Long Island, New York. Renting an all-American kit house, Ethridge and his family discovered objects stowed in the garage, things discarded by a different family and from a different moment in time. The faded objects, which are leitmotifs of an Americana of the past, speak of a lifetime of childhood summers: dusty Cola bottles, a plastic bat or fallen kite. In Ethridge s work, the passage of time, and youth itself, is both acutely personal and stylised, in images that are at once synthetic and spontaneous, laden with familiar photographic tropes which are shown to us askance.

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Publisher: MACK BOOKS
Publication Date: 2016
Binding: Soft cover
Book Condition: As New
Signed: Signed by Artist
Singer sewn paperback. 32 pages, 15 colour plates. 23.8 x 32.3 cm. Signed on colophon page. As new. Shelter Island comprises a body of work made by Roe Ethridge during a summer stay in Long Island, New York. Renting an all-American kit house, Ethridge and his family discovered objects stowed in the garage, things discarded by a different family and from a different moment in time. The faded objects, which are leitmotifs of an Americana of the past, speak of a lifetime of childhood summers: dusty Cola bottles, a plastic bat or fallen kite. In Ethridge s work, the passage of time, and youth itself, is both acutely personal and stylised, in images that are at once synthetic and spontaneous, laden with familiar photographic tropes which are shown to us askance.

Publisher: MACK BOOKS
Publication Date: 2016
Binding: Soft cover
Book Condition: As New
Signed: Signed by Artist
Singer sewn paperback. 32 pages, 15 colour plates. 23.8 x 32.3 cm. Signed on colophon page. As new. Shelter Island comprises a body of work made by Roe Ethridge during a summer stay in Long Island, New York. Renting an all-American kit house, Ethridge and his family discovered objects stowed in the garage, things discarded by a different family and from a different moment in time. The faded objects, which are leitmotifs of an Americana of the past, speak of a lifetime of childhood summers: dusty Cola bottles, a plastic bat or fallen kite. In Ethridge s work, the passage of time, and youth itself, is both acutely personal and stylised, in images that are at once synthetic and spontaneous, laden with familiar photographic tropes which are shown to us askance.