INSTAsalon #83 – Muhammad Fadli

Muhammad Fadli, photographer Live from JakartaAuthor of The Banda Journal (Jordan, jordan Édition, 2021)

INSTAsalon #84 – Rich-Joseph Facun

Rich-Joseph Facun, photographerwith Jasmine Facun, editor and collaboratorLive from Athens, OhioDiscussing Black Diamonds (Fall Line Press, 2021)

INSTAsalon #86 – Rafal Milach and Jörg Colberg

Rafał Milach, photographer with Jörg Colberg, writer, photographer and educator Live from Warsaw and MassachusettsDiscussing STRAJK / STRIKE (Jednostka Gallery, 2021)

Salon #54 – Luis Weinstein / Photobooks from Chile

9 February 2022: 10x10 hosted a salon on photobooks from Chile with photographer Luis Weinstein in a private home in Manhattan. Chilean publications written with photographs have a long tradition of over 150 years and cover a wide range of genres, from photobook essays to almost hand-made visual poetry, from political propaganda to large coffee…

Salon #55 – Anita Pouchard Serra and Matarile Ediciones

2 March 2022: 10x10 hosted a salon with photographer Anita Pouchard Serra and artist / publisher Martha Naranjo Sandoval of Matarile Ediciones with photographer groana melendez at the Center for Book Arts in Manhattan. Anita Pouchard Serra (@anitapouchardserra) is a French-Argentinian visual storyteller working on stories that affect her personally, connecting to current societal issues…

AIPAD Talk

Join Olga Yatskevich and Russet Lederman, co-founders of 10x10 Photobooks, for a virtual discussion about What They Saw: Historical Photobooks by Women, 1843-1991, winner of the Paris Photo-Aperture Foundation Photography Catalogue of the Year Award for 2021.

Free

Salon #57—Accra Shepp

Accra Shepp, Radical Justice: Lifting Every Voice (Convoke, 2022)

Work/Cited: Rewriting Photobook History to Include Women

In this episode, of the New York Pubic Library's online Work/Cited program, NYPL's Elizabeth Cronin and editors/researchers Olga Yatskevich and Russet Lederman, co-editors of What They Saw: Historical Photobooks by Women, 1843–1999, will discuss women's involvement in the emergence and development of the photographic book—sharing both well-known books, as well as many forgotten examples. 

Free