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[10" x 12.5"]. 200 full-page duotones. 351pp. Very good, with very slightly bumped corners. 
Please note that deliveries to addresses in the UK and Europe will be in 4-14 business days. Other countries should refer to Alibris standard times. Between 1954 and her suicide in 1971 Diane Arbus took some 150, 000 photographs. She had grown up in the same New York milieu as her friend, Richard Avedon. She was the daughter of an upper middle class Jewish family that owned a Fifth Avenue clothing store. Her posthumous retrospecitve exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art on New York in 1972 showed some 150 portraits upon which her reputation was built and has been sustained ever since. Her subjects ranged from anonymous strangers found on the street to celebrities, freaks, circus people and nudists. They are some of the most powerful photographs ever made. The 1972 MoMA catalogue has never been out of print and has sold unparalleled quantities. The great retrospective drawn from her entire career has until now remained unpublished. This is a milestone book for which we have been waiting years. The book is published on the ocassion of a retrospective exhibition starting in San Francisco in September 2003. It will come to the V and A in London in October 2005 and will run there until January 2006. ISBN10: 0224071831. 
351pp. 200 duotone plates. Lrg. 4to. Cloth. D.j. Published in conjunction with an exhibition at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Oct. 2003-Feb. 2004. 
Between 1954 and her suicide in 1971 Diane Arbus took some 150, 000 photographs. She was the daughter of an upper middle class Jewish family that owned a Fifth Avenue clothing store. Her posthumous retrospective exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art i... 
PLEASE NOTE: All books are promptly imported from the UK using International Priority Airmail. Delivery is typically 5-10 working days. Please do not select expedited shipping. Heavier and more expensive items have tracking number. Professional and reliable bookseller (est.1987). 
Brand new. SOFTCOVER. Still sealed in publisher's original shrink wrap. NO marks or flaws. Perfect for gift-giving. 