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‘Danish Tattooing’ traced the visual development of tattooing from 1895 up to the present day, with special attention paid to the Golden Age of the 1960s, an era particularly rich with fascinating tales from a rough scene. Now, this new Director’s Cut goes even deeper into this rich history, taking a closer look at the beginning of the scene in the early 1900s and following it into the 1980s with new photography and in-depth profiles of tattoo artists throughout Scandinavia.
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Ahn Sang-Soo. Dokkaebi.
The Dokkaebi, Korean goblins who have soft spots for pretty girls and hedonistic feasts, thrive in folktales and as gargoyle-like ornamental totems. Throughout Korean history, they have been interpreted as evil spirits, bogeymen or ghosts of the dead, but always phantoms that bewitch, play tricks on, and make fun of human beings with their grim, uncommon powers and strange talents. Some are said to look very much like humans, some like fantastic animals, and some like dragon-esque hybrids. Here, source photographs of traditional representations accompany stark, strikingly tattoo-like black-and-white designs based on them, which are interleaved on glossy pages.kunst

Diane Keaton
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Bill Wood's business was photography and he produced tens of thousands of images over the course of his career. A tall, slender, hardworking family man with a penchant for bow ties, Wood (1913-1979) was born, lived, and died in the Fort Worth, Texas area, and his photography played a central role in how his clients chose to see and to portray themselves and their city. 'Bill Wood's Business' features approximately 300 of Woods photographs, and essays by Diane Keaton and Marvin Heiferman that pay respect to the skills Wood (and professional photographers like him) brought to the business of photography.kunst

Paul Martineau
The Nude in Photography
To consider the nude in photography is to traverse the entire history of the medium since its inception in the mid-1830s to the present day. From the first hand-coloured daguerreotypes of Greek sculptures to early studies of the live figure to staged scenes and abstractions, the unadorned human body has remained an ever-evolving theme for photographers.kunst
