Beautiful limited edition book by Bruce Rae, Terry Jones & Tom Phillips out now!
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Dan Holdsworth

French Kiss, by Anders Petersen
The Color of Loss, by Dan Burkholder
Developing Vision & Style, edited by Eddie Ephraums
Northern Expsoures, by Chris Steele-Perkins
Becoming, by Michelle Sank
The Water's Edge, by Michelle Sank
The Old Order and The New: PH Emerson and Photography
Motherland, by Simon Roberts
The Black House, by Colin Jones
A Few Streets, A Few People, by John Comino-James
The British Landscape by John Davies
Unseen UK: A book of photographs by the people at Royal Mail
American Surfaces: Photographs by Stephen Shore
A Different Light, by Richard Heeps
Tumulus, by John Miles
Dan Holdsworth, a Photoworks Monograph
Harry Callahan: The Photographer at Work, by Britt Salvesen
Reflections, by Norman Forster
Golden Gate, Richard Misrach
Family: Photographers Photograph their Families
Scotland’s Coast: A Photographer’s Journey, Joe Cornish
Augustus F Sherman: Ellis Island Portraits 1905–1920
Earthsong, Bernhard Edmaier
Paul Strand: Southwest
Fear This, Anthony Sau
Walker Evans: The Hungry Eye
Many Are Called, Walker Evans
Teenage, Joseph Szabo
The Fat Baby: Stories by Eugene Richards
Homes Fit for Heroes: Photographs by Bill Brandt 1939–43
Tina Modotti & Edward Weston: The Mexico Years, Sarah M Lowe
Time in space: photographs by Chrystel Lebas
René Burri Photographs, Hans-Michael Koetzle
Markings: Sacred Landscapes from the Air, photographs by Marilyn Bridges
Josef Sudek: Poet of Prague, A Photographer’s Life
Consuming the American Landscape, by John Ganis
Landscape: The world’s top photographers and the stories behind their greatest images, by Terry Hope
Aquarium: Photographs by Diane Cook and Len Jenshel
360° Imaging: The photographer’s panoramic virtual reality manual, by Philip Andrews
The Scots: A Photohistory, by Murray MacKinnon and Richard Oram
Twins, photographs by Mary Ellen Mark
Fine Art Photography: Creating Beautiful Images for Sale and Display, by Terry Hope
The Photoshop Book for Digital Photographers, by Scott Kelby
Home Photography: Inspiration on your doorstep, by Andrew Sanderson
The Photographer’s Website Manual, by Philip Andrews
The History of Japanese Photography, by Anne Wilkes Tucker, Dana Friis-Hansen, Kaneko Ryuchi and Takeba Joe
Revelation: Representations of Christ in Photography, by Nissan N Perez
Photoshop for Photography: The Art of Pixel Processing, by Tom Ang
Soma, by Andreas Gefeller
Carlo Mollino Polaroids
Edward Weston: A Legacy, by Jennifer A Watts

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A shining light
Brighton-based Photoworks commissions and publishes contemporary photography, the most recent example to have appeared in Ag being Nigel Green’s Dungeness project (Ag39). The organisation also produces a biannual journal (details at www.photoworksuk.org). The third and fourth books in the Photoworks Monograph series come from Dan Holdsworth and Sophy Rickett and have been produced with support from Arts Council England, as were the first two by Gareth McConnell and Nigel Shafran. Holdsworth has built up a reputation in recent years for his colour landscape photography, much of which makes greater use of saturated hues and dramatic lighting than is strictly fashionable. Since the late 1990s he has exhibited nationally and abroad: although many of his chosen locations follow popular themes such as motorways, car parks, industrial installations, despoiled landscapes, he renders them with a palette far richer than is familiar to his contemporaries. Sometimes the saturation comes from underexposure, often it is the result of shooting at night under artificial light. For those of us a little weary of the dreary, muted, washed-out tones - de rigueur among the fin de siecle in-crowd [too many French clichés - Ed] - this makes a refreshing change, and seems to set the places more firmly in modern times. A welcome break from the bleak post-Soviet distopias to which we are becoming inured.

Dan Holdsworth, a Photoworks Monograph co-published with Steidl, £19.99 hardback, ISBN 3-86521-087-2.

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