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  • ESCAPE Charles Johnstone & Heather Malesson

    $55.00

    First edition
    SIGNED by Heather Malesson and Charles Johnstone

    This is the second collaboration from Johnstone & Malesson, with the first being ‘The Girl in the Fifth Floor Walk-Up’ by SUN.

    In their new book, ESCAPE, the artist duo create a world in which a fantasy-driven story of an upstate New York foray, plays out as an act between the two characters, in which the parables of invention and revelation of who is controlling the camera become the central dialogue. The use of expired, vintage Polaroid 600 film presents the images as anachronistic and seem to be from another time. It is a story in which the viewer is left to determine if the protagonist is the victim, the villain or the heroine – and who or what are they seeking to ESCAPE?

    The book also features an essay by Matthias Harder, Director of the Helmut Newton Foundation and an afterward by Brad Feuerhelm, Director of American Suburb X.

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  • ESCAPE Special Edition Charles Johnstone & Heather Malesson

    $350.00

    Photo book with print
    *Choice between 3 original prints.
    Include signed print,mounted in a mat with hard cover folio,
    set together with a book in a slipcase.
    Numbered certificate is attached to the folio
    Each print is limited edition of 15

    Print type : C print
    Print size: 10.8 x 13.3 cm
    *signed and numbered by Charles Johnstone and Heather Malesson on verso
    Published in 2021
    ISBN 978-4-908512-90-2

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  • The Girl in the Fifth Floor Walk-Up

    $65.00

    New York: S_U_N_, 2015.
    Condition: As New
    hardcover
    Second edition – 150 copies
    SIGNED by Heather Malesson and Charles Johnstone

    Charles Johnstone and Heather Malesson’s deftly designed book The Girl in the Fifth Floor Walk-Up explores the allure of a pulp fiction narrative, “The Blonde” using a Raymond Chandler excerpt from Farewell My Lovely and nineteen-forties design elements to set the tone “It was a blonde. A blonde to make a bishop kick a hole in a stained glass window. She was wearing street clothes that looked black and white, and a hat to match and she was a little haughty, but not too much. Whatever you needed, wherever you happened to be-she had it.” Second edition printed offset with red cloth cover.

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