New York Public Library, Stephen A. Schwartzman Building, Room 308
476 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York, United States
Please join 10×10 Photobooks and the Wallach Division at the New York Public Library for a Photobook Salon with Carmen Winant and Mariette Pathy Allen.
These Days
118 Winston Street, Los Angeles, California, United States
. Please join us for a book talk and gathering on protest photography in print at These Days Bookshop with Olivian Cha, Noé Montes, Marjorie Ornston and the 10x10 Photobooks editors of Flashpoint! Protest Photography in Print.
Getty Museum & Research Institute
1200 Getty Center Drive, Los Angeles, California, United States
This pop-up reading room surveys a global history of photobooks by women photographers from the Getty Library. As part of an international series showcasing the 10×10 Photobooks' publication What They Saw:…
Getty Museum & Research Institute
1200 Getty Center Drive, Los Angeles, California, United States
Celebrate the opening of the Getty Research Institute exhibition What They Saw: Historical Photobooks by Women, 1943–1999. Artists Catherine Opie and Melodie McDaniel will be joined by 10×10 Photobooks co-founder Russet Lederman and exhibition co-curator Isotta Poggi to explore photobook publication and how the process highlights themes of collaboration, storytelling, politics, identity, and resilience.
10×10 Photobooks and Contact Photography Festival seeks PHOTO-BASED protest zine submissions for a community selection featured in the hands-on Flashpoint! Protest Photography in Print Reading Room from 1 May to 21 June at Contact Gallery in Toronto, Canada.
In February 2024, 10×10 Photobooks awarded its 3rd cycle of Research Grants on Photobook History and was open to proposals on any topic in photobook history. We are very excited to share the results of that research in a virtual event.
Flashpoint!, a reading room exhibition focusing on protest photography in print, presents a global selection of photobooks, zines, posters, pamphlets, independent journals and alternative newspapers that address protest and resistance from the 1950s to the present.