Banksy Takes A Seaside Holiday

The slippery street artist(s) known as Banksy recently dropped a new work in the old English seaside town of Clevedon. As an “old” person I resent the implication, but it does make a point.

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Word on the Street : Philly

An anonymous street artist who goes by the moniker mpeachhim has been installing tiles around Philadelphia that are clever and to the point. If you’re in the city, they can be found at 10th & South St., Lombard & Broad, and Modine & Market. You can also follow the project on Instagram here.

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Summer Reading

 

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The Great New York Subway Map

Italian illustrator and author Emilliano Ponzi has released a marvelous book in collaboration with the MoMA in New York City introducing young readers to the work of iconic graphic designer Massimo Vignelli. Using illustrations of trains, subway stations, advertisements and the NYC skyline, Emiliano’s book tells the story of how Vignelli created an “easy-to-navigate subway map in 1972”. The Great New York Subway Map aims to show how graphic design can be used for “problem-solving” and turning “chaos to order”.

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And The Winner Is …

I am happy to announce that the winner of the collectible travel book giveaway is Johanna B. from the UK. She has fittingly chosen The Romance of London 1911 by Gordon Home, which was published by Adam and Charles Black, London with 12 full-page color illustrations.

On another note, if you have been following Travel Between The Pages on Facebook, the blog will now appear on its own FB page here . You can of course receive daily posts via email by subscribing on the right side of this page. We can also be reached by email at travelbetweenthepages@gmail.com . And even by phone at our new Google Voice number (724)739-3443.

 

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A Hole In The Alps

DIG collective, A Hole in The Alps

About this time each August, I become nostalgic for the Swiss Alps. I was fortunate to have spent most of the month one year camping and hiking around Switzerland. And one of my favorite areas was the less touristed valleys and villages of the Graubünden. So, I was particularly excited to hear about this very cool biennial art event in the region.

Lita Albuquerque, Transparent Earth

Spread across the stunning Safiental Valley in the Swiss Canton Graubünden, Art Safiental is the second annual edition of an ambitious public outdoor exhibition. Exploring the theme “horizontal-vertical” this year, the show’s artworks aim to reconceptualize the Land Art of the 20th century.

Analia Saban, Circuit Board For Rock Art

Bob Gramsma, Egschi Shell

Art Safiental links the widely spread pieces through hiking trails and public transportation. Running through October of this year, the specific settings for the installations can be located on a free map.

Bildstein/Glatz , Himmel III

Paul Barsch, Sanitary Ceramics

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NYC Word On The Street

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Once there was a penniless writer

 

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Don’t Be A Bored Tourist

British documentary photographer Laurence Stephens has a decidedly satirical eye, so it’s no surprise that his new book Bored Tourists exudes an  acerbic wit. Based on a photo series of the same title, the book takes a trenchant look at travelers who seem to be let down by their tourist experience.

Bored Tourists is the product of a summer-long trip throughout Spain and Portugal where Stephens noted a preponderance of unenthusiastic, apathetic, and just plain bored tourists. The images, while superficially lighthearted, present a jaundiced take on modern European mass tourism.

The book is published by East London indie press Hoxton Mini Press.

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Back of Beyond (update)

In May, I posted a story about this wonderful Utah bookstore, now just in time for the 50th anniversary of Edward Abbey’s environmental classic Desert Solitaire, Back of Beyond Books in Moab, has launched three different publishing projects to release work that both celebrates and interrogates Desert Solitaire. To help fund those projects, store owner Andy Nettell has also launched a Kickstarter campaign with a goal of $15,000 and a duration of 30 days.

In November, Back of Beyond will publish Amy Irvine’s Desert Cabal: A New Season in the Wilderness in conjunction with Torrey House Press. In Desert Cabal, Irvine not only celebrates Abbey’s work and the influence it had on her life, but also challenges many of the dated and even sexist ideas within it.

The store will also be publishing a limited-run facsimile of the first draft of Desert Solitaire, featuring “hundreds of manuscript changes” in Edward Abbey’s own hand; only 50 sets will be available. And in partnership with Ken Sanders of Ken Sanders Rare Books, Back of Beyond will release four Desert Solitaire-themed “literary letterpress broadsides” featuring original work from writers Doug Peacock, Wendell Berry, Terry Tempest Williams and Amy Irvine.

“I’m so excited about these three publications,” said Nettell. “But it is a little scary, too. Even though I’ve been in the book trade for 18 years, we’ve never published a book and I really had no idea how expensive books and publications are to publish.”

Abbey’s Desert Solitaire has been the bestselling book at Back of Beyond throughout its 29 years of existence. Abbey himself worked as a ranger at nearby Arches National Monument for two seasons in the 1950s, and the journal he kept during that time would later grow into Desert Solitaire.

via Shelf Awareness

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