Edited by Alex Halberstadt and Arlette Hernandez. Preface by Walter Scott.  A vibrant anthology of comics inspired by visits to the museum, featuring Roz Chast, Liana Finck, Walter Scott and more—and a collectible foldout poster by Chris Ware  Have you ever left a museum feeling inspired or delighted? Has an artwork ever made you…
Edited and with essays by Ron Magliozzi and Jenny He  With a visual style inspired by the aesthetics of animation and silent comedy, Tim Burton has reinvented Hollywood genre filmmaking over the past three decades, melding the exotic, the horrific, and the comic and manipulating expressionism and fantasy with the skill of a graphic…
From a couture Dior gown and a rose-adorned Barbie to ancient mosaics and Victorian Valentine’s cards, this curated collection of more than 200 stunning images celebrates the world’s most iconic flower. Discover the extraordinary ways the universally beloved bloom has been depicted through time and across cultures, both within and beyond the garden. Featuring 220…
Edited by Jodi Hauptman. Essays by Ewa Lajer-Burcharth, Laura Neufeld, Lena Struwe  In April 1919, the Swedish artist Hilma af Klint ventured outside her studio to draw the first blossoms of spring. Having spent the previous decade creating an epic series of paintings filled with vivid geometric and organic forms—among that era’s earliest explorations…
A vibrant and lavishly illustrated look at the celebrated artist and designer KAWS. Published on the occasion of a solo exhibition held at the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, this is the first book dedicated to the full range of work by this star from a new generation of pop artists. Multidisciplinary artist KAWS was first…
Edited and with essays by Richard Benson and Peter Galassi  Richard Benson, former dean of the Yale School of Art and a MacArthur Foundation Fellow, has been a photographer for more than four decades but until now, his art often took a back seat to his prodigious achievements as a renowned printer and teacher….
Nkanga’s poetry and drawings, further facets to her multidisciplinary practice, continue her exploration of humanity’s relationship to the land.  Following her monumental atrium commission for the Museum of Modern Art, New York, Stitched Dreams looks at 30 years of drawing, painting and poetry by Nigerian Belgian artist Otobong Nkanga. Created concurrently with her larger…
Limit one per customer.  By Dan Nadel, Thomas Crow, Clare Lilley and Jason Schmidt  Phaidon presents KAWS, the most comprehensive study on one of contemporary art’s most influential and much-loved forces. This will be the latest publication in Phaidon’s Contemporary Artist Series, one that has revolutionized how art is discussed by collaborating with…
By Emily Hall. Illustrations by Victoria Semykina  Bert, a plucky but sometimes lazy bird, wakes up one morning to discover that his nest has fallen apart. After an unsuccessful search for a quick fix, he finds himself in the studio of the legendary artist Anni Albers, who shows him how to weave a home…
Edited by Eva Respini. With contributions by Johanna Burton and John Waters  Cindy Sherman is one of the most influential and consistently original artists of our time. Masquerading as a myriad of characters in front of her own camera, Sherman creates invented personas and provocative tableaus that examine the construction of identity and the…
To look inside this book, click here.  Edited by Samantha Friedman  Van Gogh, DalÃ, and Beyond: The World Reimagined traces how modern artists have reinvented the genres of landscape, still life, and portraiture from 1889 to today. A selection of paintings, sculptures, drawings, photographs, prints, and media works from the unparalleled collection of…
Edited by Juliet Kinchin. With a contribution by Aidan O’Connor  Over the course of the past century, the kitchen, more than any other room in the modern dwelling, has been the focus of intensive aesthetic and technological innovation. Counter Space examines the twentieth-century transformation of the kitchen through the collection of The Museum of…
Edited by Sarah Suzuki  Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec is widely regarded as the most talented and innovative printmaker of the late nineteenth century. Trained as a painter, Lautrec adopted color lithography in 1891, and it immediately became an obsession: in the decade before his early death, in 1901, he created more than 350 lithographs, from…
By Tess Taylor  In Last West: Roadsongs for Dorothea Lange, poet Tess Taylor follows Dorothea Lange’s winding paths across California during the Great Depression and in its immediate aftermath. On these journeys, Lange photographed migrant laborers, Dust Bowl refugees, tent cities, and Japanese American internment camps. Taylor’s hybrid text collages lyric and oral histories…
Edited by Sarah Suzuki  Printmaking is a diverse world offering a myriad of techniques, each one producing distinctive visual effects—from the rich, velvety lines of drypoint to the bold, flat coloring of screenprint. This volume illuminates a wide range of these techniques, featuring short overviews as well as lush illustrations of more than 130…