How We See What They Saw
A "Micro" Reading Room of Photobooks by Women at George Mason University. Inspired by 10×10 Photobooks' How We See: Photobooks by Women (2017) and What They Saw: Historical Photobooks by Women, 1843-1999.
A "Micro" Reading Room of Photobooks by Women at George Mason University. Inspired by 10×10 Photobooks' How We See: Photobooks by Women (2017) and What They Saw: Historical Photobooks by Women, 1843-1999.
The Hirsch Library at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston hosts Flashpoint! Protest Photography in Print, 1950–Present, a reading room exhibition focusing on global protest photography in print that address protest and resistance from the 1950s to the present.
The Museum of Fine Art, Houston’s Hirsch Library brings together Danny Lyon and Russet Lederman to explore the impact that Lyon’s work has made on both our culture at large and the development of photobooks as a genre.
Flashpoint! Reading Room @ Museum of Fine Arts, Houston joins nationwide expression of creative resistance.
Please join 10×10 Photobooks and the Magnum Foundation for a salon with Isadora Romero and Sofía Granados Dyer on Wednesday, 18 February from 6 to 8 pm at the Magnum Foundation, 59 East 4th…
Printed Matter presents Flashpoint!, a traveling reading room exhibition organized by 10×10 Photobooks dedicated to protest photography in print. The presentation brings together a selection of photobooks, zines, posters, pamphlets, independent journals, and alternative newspapers from the 1950s to the present. Across these formats, photography emerges as both a tool of protest and a cultural artifact of resistance, capturing political struggles as they unfold and as they are later remembered.
Hosted by the IMS Paulista Photography Library, "O Que Elas Viram" (What They Saw) Reading Room at the Instituto Moreira Salles in São Paulo, Brazil, draws from its extensive women’s photobook collection, which includes the recently acquired “Coleção 10×10 Photobooks: Fotolivros Históricos de Mulheres.”
10x10 Photobooks is pleased to announce a new grant cycle and call for applications as part of its ongoing photobook research grants program to encourage and support scholarship on under-explored topics in photobook history.
Join Printed Matter and 10×10 Photobooks for a salon discussion with archivists, book dealers, and artists Arthur Fournier (Arthur Fournier Fine & Rare), Adrian Franks, and Daylon Orr (Fugitive Materials), exploring the legacy of political protest posters.
Join us for the next 10×10 Salon with Balarama Heller and Anita Goes, organized in collaboration with Art in Brackets.
Pfizer Building.
630 Flushing Ave, Brooklyn.
G train to Flushing Avenue Station.
Saturday, 25 April and Sunday, 26 April, 12 pm - 6 pm.
Curators Maggie Mustard and La Tanya Autry discuss how protest and resistance materials are selected, organized, and presented in museums and libraries. Moderated by Deirdre Donohue. Hosted by the Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints and Photographs at The New York Public Library in association with Printed Matter. Presented in collaboration with Flashpoint! Protest Photography in Print, a traveling reading room exhibition at Printed Matter organized by 10×10 Photobooks.