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Montana 1: Budapest by Chris Shaw
Montana 0: Carte Blanche by Suffo Moncloa
Walk To The Moon
17 8 176 8 6 (Evidences)

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04: Photobooks

Larry Sultan
Larry Sultan’s Pictures from Home is an intimate exploration of family, memory, and the shifting meaning of home. Over a decade, Sultan photographed his parents in their California home, blending images, text, and home movie stills to reveal the tension between personal memory and the myths we create. Both tender and unsettling, the book challenges the ideals of the American dream, offering a deeply personal yet universal meditation on family and identity.



Tokuko Ushioda
My Husband is a hauntingly intimate exploration of love, loss, and memory. Through fragmented images and text, Małgorzata Stankiewicz constructs a deeply personal yet universal meditation on absence and the traces left behind. The book is a quiet, evocative reflection on the ways in which home is shaped by those we love—and how its meaning shifts in their absence.





Erik Van der Weijde
Home Is Where the Dog Is is a heartwarming photographic tribute to the bond between people and their dogs. Through intimate and playful portraits, the book captures the warmth, companionship, and sense of home that dogs bring into our lives. It’s a celebration of the simple, everyday moments that define what home truly means.



Joseph Koudelka
Exiles by Josef Koudelka is a poignant exploration of displacement and belonging. His stark black-and-white images capture solitude and restlessness across Europe, reflecting his own nomadic life. More than a document of migration, Exiles is a poetic meditation on life on the margins and the search for connection in an ever-shifting world.



Shingo Kanagawa
“While it may have been desire and love that brought the three of us together, it ius ot what connects us now. I think what we share now would be better described by the word friendship (though I can’t say with confidence that I understand the difference between love and friendship well). As our relationships continue, the meaning of (and need for) sexuality keeps changing.”
― from Shingo Kanagawa’s afterword



Silence is a Gift (Chose Commune)
Ciro Battiloro
Like a door into their intimacy and captivating simplicity, Silence is a Gift gently celebrates the inhabitants of Southern Italy, a region still scarred by modern tragedies.




Family (光琳社出版 )
Yurie Nagashima
This book is a compilation of such family photos, and although the person herself says that it is a book with a "private atmosphere" and "universal scenery," the appearance of a stark family and a family that is sometimes nostalgic. A book in which the daily life of she also writes that the two emotions that arise from the presence of her family, "a sense of security" and "a sense of loneliness," inspired her to start taking photographs.




Home (Bluecoat)
Nick Hedges

Home by Nick Hedges is a raw and unfiltered exploration of Britain’s housing crisis during the late 1960s and early 1970s. Created as part of Hedges’ work for Shelter, the National Campaign for the Homeless, the book transcends its immediate historical moment to stand today as a testament to systemic injustice. - BPJ




Katherine Turczan

Katherine Turczan’s work is a deeply personal exploration of family, memory, and heritage. After the death of her grandfather and learning of her parents' dementia, she set out to trace her roots in Ukraine, armed with an 8x10 camera and a desire to understand the past that shaped her. Through her portraits of family members she never knew, Turczan captures the quiet moments of connection and loss, weaving a story of rediscovery and the fragile bridge between generations.




Home and Other Stories (University of New Mexico Press)Catherine Wagner
In the photographs in 'Home and Other Stories, ' Catherine Wagner takes these precepts as her starting point. Each three-part work shows various aspects of one American home: rooms or potions of rooms and objects in ensembles that are carefully arranged for visitors or carelessly disposed in privacy.

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