Other Pictures by Miles Aldridge (2012)

 

 

Spec:

395 mm x 280 mm x 20 mm | 1550 g

 

(All details throughout this listing are accurately hand written/measured by us, none are copied from another listing)

 

Condition:

Book is in excellent condition, back cover has a small surface mark top left, inside front+back cover has some light tape marks. Slipcase in very good condition, with light wear to edges.

 

Note: The pictures above are the most accurate depiction of this items condition, please carefully study them as the condition of this items is ultimately as pictured. This item was purchased as new by us, and is from a pet free, smoke free environment.

 

Shipping:

All of our magazines/books/prints are shipped safely and securely using a protective bookwrap (amazon style). This protects the edges/corners from damage during transit. We offer two UK domestic tracked shipping options via Evri (Hermes): 1 day delivery or 2-3 day delivery. Orders are dispatched within 1 working day. International orders are shipped via eBays Global Shipping Programme (we do not have control over the price). Valuable items will require a signature upon delivery.

 

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Contact:

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About the book:

Other Pictures is Miles Aldridge's surreal take on the traditional family album, and an autobiographical sequel to Pictures for Photographs (Edition 7L, 2009), in which Aldridge presented his fashion drawings and photographs. Other Pictures opens with seductive black and white images of Aldridge's then lover, now wife, model Kristen McMenamy. Taken in hotel rooms after fashion shows from London to New York between 1994 and 1997, the photos are spontaneous and narcissistic, and show the young Aldridge investigating the medium of 35 mm photography as much as his unfolding romance with McMenamy. The second part of Other Pictures is an introspective portrait in deep colour of Aldridge's married life with children. Cinematic and beautiful but filled with anxiety, these images show Aldridge's children as vacant and sometimes corpse-like actors in the photographer's imagined drama of family life.