book ''SHIPWRECKED'' sold out

Project: https://ekaterinavasilyeva.ru/shipwrecked

Also available: Vienna, Austria, AnzenbergerGallery bookshop / Regina Maria Anzenberger 

Tokio, Japan / TWELVEBOOKS sold out 

Kanazawa, Japan / IACK STUDIA sold out


News:
—  I am happy to participated in Exhibition at The Kitab — India’s First Photobook Festival (21st-23rd September 2018)

—  Book fair Art book fair in Tokyo (20−21.10.2018)

— I am glad to share my recent interview in the framework of a book festival, where my two books (''After the Firebird'' and ''Shipwrecked'') have participated.

— IACK’s choice of 2018

— Review in English by  Douglas Stockdale

I find a book design’s that echoes the artistic intent to really amplify the narrative; in this case the rough twine binding is similar in nature to what one might expect a young Sea Scout in the early 1940's to use if he were to create his photobook. We observe similar hand-made contraptions such as the float lashed together using old oil cans that are utilized for a sea and river adventures. This is a British equivalent to Mark Twain’s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, a story of American youth, which was actually first published in the UK in 1884 before coming to the US in 1885. In reflection, perhaps Huckleberry Finn was an inspiration for Robert Baden- Powell, the founder of Scouting, who in turn inspired the unknown Sea Scout whose delightful photographs we enjoy here.

—  Bookarts Newsletters No. 122 December 2018 — January 2019

—  Virtual Bookshelf JC of Josef Chladek


! Each book cover is supplied by an individual photograph.
First 1−30 book cover — original photos of 40−50 years!

The book data:

Press realise 19.09.2018

Designer Ekaterina Vasilyeva
Limited edition of 50 copies (numbered and signed)
Handmade cover and binding
Size: 12 cm x 33 cm
110 pages
49 color pictures and 85 black and white pictures
Inside paper: Ozon Ivory 150 gr
Cover paper: Murillo 260 gr
Languages: English
Self published and printed in St. Petersburg (Print Gallery) in 2018


Collective memory probably exists. There are subtle threads connecting people, many of whom most likely are no longer with us today.
I believe our aim, when we get our hands on a treasure, should be not to hide it but to show it to the world.

I would like the story to sound mysterious: Say I found a chest with negatives from the forties and early fifties of the 20-th century made by an unknown boy from the UK and some comments on them. Say it was found on the seashore at low tide.
That is because I do not want it to be as it is: that I simply bought an archive at a flea market in London.

The archive is a living organism belonging both to the present and future and the past as well. Therefore I felt a need to include the found archive
into my own one. I lived for a relatively long time in the UK and, in a way, that place began to feel like home.

The most striking thing is that the found stories began to interact with my own: pictures, taken by myself and strangers, made at different times and in different places in the country were united, becoming a single whole.
The combination of times began to tell a timeless story about the landscapes of this country and the people who photographed them more than
half a century ago.
It seems to me that we became fully fledged coauthors. That the unknown photographer took part in the process of creating our story.
His unspoken question ''Will you forget us? '' that I read ''between the old negatives'' turned into an answer: ''Yes, you will remember us''.
I certainly would like to imagine the boys presented in the photos or at least their friends or relatives are still alive.
Having opened the treasure chest I would not like to think that the archive is no longer meaningful to anyone, that all perished in a shipwreck. And instead that by opening the chest I let out hope and gave new life to the old story of deceased people, their youth and their adventures …


P. S. All the black and white pictures are from the old archive of negatives of the unknown boy made in forties and fifties of the 20-th century in the UK. All color photographs were taken by me during the period from 2012 to 2017 when the author of the project lived and visited the UK.


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