10x10 Photobooks
10x10 Photobooks is a non-profit organization founded to "foster engagement with the global photobook community through an appreciation, dissemination and understanding of photobooks." Founded in 2012, 10x10 is a presenter of public photobook events, including reading rooms, salons, and online communities, as well as a publisher of art catalogs representing the photobook medium.
History[]
10 x 10 Photobooks was co-founded by Russet Lederman, Olga Yatskevich and Matthew Carson (emeritus) in 2012, with Dolly Meieran joining in 2019 as Director of Salons.
Lederman is a writer, editor and photobook collector in New York City and teaches art writing at the School of Visual Arts in New York. She writes on photobooks for print and online journals, including , The Eyes, IMA, Aperture and the International Center of Photography's library blog. She also co-edits The Gould Collection,[1] lectures internationally on photobooks, and has received awards and grants from Prix Ars Electronica and the Smithsonian American Art museum. Yatskevich is a photobook collector based in New York and contributing writer for Collector Daily, a platform that offers photography criticism from a collector's perspective. Lang is a photography and photobook collector also based in New York City.
What They Saw: Historical Photobooks by Women, 1843–1999 (2021) won the Photography Catalogue of the Year category in the 2021 Paris Photo-Aperture Foundation PhotoBook Award.[2]
Reading rooms[]
One of 10x10's major activities is the sponsorship of public reading rooms in which attendees are invited to sit and browse through a curated selection of works.[3]
How We See: Photobooks by Women (2018)[]
How We See: Photobooks by Women was a hands-on touring reading room, publication and series of public events featuring a global range of one hundred 21st-century photobooks by women photographers. "In this new photobook anthology and touring exhibition, women take center stage in a tradition that has historically ignored their importance."[3]
The touring reading room was developed after 10x10 collaborators investigated the history of women's contributions to photobooks and their own publishing practices. For example, historical records establish Anna Atkins's Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions[4] (1843–1853) as the first photobook. However, when analyzing recent publishing and award patterns, "Lederman and her colleagues, co-founder Olga Yatskevich and director Michael Lang, found that between 2013 and 2017, 40% of the shortlisted photobooks for first book and dummy awards were by women. But when they looked at the shortlists for best book, author, or annual photobook of the year prizes, they found that it dropped to 23%. What’s more, during the same period of time, photobooks by women made up only 10.5% of the entries in the six major “book-on-books” anthologies, and in the online inventory of major photobook sellers, only 16% of the available titles were by women."[5]
The accompanying catalog was published in mid-November 2018 with a second printing in February 2019. The publication includes the one hundred photobooks in the reading room, and is supplemented with an additional 100 historical books by women photographers, an annotated history and essays by photographer Ishiuchi Miyako; Magnum Foundation Executive Director, Kristen Lubben and Valentina Abenavoli of Akina Books.[6] How We See : Photobooks by Women received the 2018 AIGA 50 books | 50 Covers Award.[7] and was shortlisted for the Arles Rencontres del la Photographie 2019 Historical Books award. [8]
Publications[]
- 10×10 American Photobooks (2013)[9]
- 10×10 Japanese Photobooks (2014)[10]
- CLAP! 10×10 Contemporary Latin American Photobooks (2017)[11]
- How We See: Photobooks by Women (2018)[6]
- What They Saw: Historical Photobooks by Women, 1843–1999 (Nov, 2021)[12]
References[]
- ^ "What is The Gould Collection?". The Gould Collection. 2016-05-10. Retrieved 2019-06-12.
- ^ "Announcing the 2021 PhotoBook Awards Shortlist". Aperture. 4 October 2021. Retrieved 2021-10-04.
- ^ a b Lachowsky, Cat. "How We See: Photobooks by Women – Book Review". LensCulture. Retrieved 2019-06-04.
- ^ Atkins, Anna (1880). Photographs of British algae cyanotype impressions. OCLC 53699008.
- ^ "How We See: Photobooks by Women". British Journal of Photography. 2018-09-26. Retrieved 2019-03-15.
- ^ a b Lederman, Russet; Yatskevich, Olga; Lang, Michael; Ishiuchi, Miyako; Lubben, Kristen; Abenavoli, Valentina (2018). How we see: photobooks by women. ISBN 978-0-692-14429-9. OCLC 1050446852.
- ^ "50 Books | 50 Covers of 2017 competition results". AIGA. 2018-09-10. Archived from the original on 2019-06-27. Retrieved 2019-06-27.
- ^ d'Arles, Les Rencontres. "Shortlisted 2019 Book Awards". www.rencontres-arles.com. Retrieved 2019-08-14.
- ^ Carson, Matthew; Lederman, Russet; Yatskevich, Olga; Levi Strauss, David; White, Tony; Susuda, Miwa; Schles, Ken; Mirpaul, Evan; Roth, Andrew (2013). 10x10 American photobooks. ISBN 978-0-9896888-0-2. OCLC 859263562.
- ^ Carson, Matthew; Lang, Michael; Lederman, Russet; Yatskevich, Olga; 10x10 Photobooks; International Center of Photography; PGH Photo Fair; Unseen Photo Fair (2014). 10x10 Japanese Photobooks. ISBN 978-0-692-20866-3. OCLC 1008283592.
- ^ Yatskevich, Olga; Lederman, Russet; Carson, Matthew; Carnegie Museum of Art; Aperture Foundation; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Tex; Exhibition "CLAP!"; Exhibition "CLAP!"; Exhibition "CLAP!" (2017). CLAP! 10x10 contemporary Latin American photobooks: 2000–2016. ISBN 978-0-692-83478-7. OCLC 1031278357.
- ^ Lederman, Russet; Yatskevich, Olga (2021). What they saw: historical photobooks by women, 1843–1999. ISBN 978-0-578-93213-2. OCLC 1263243647.
External links[]
- Arts organizations established in 2012
- American photography organizations
- Books by type
- History of photography
- Publishers