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#rizzoli
zegalba · 8 months
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RICK OWENS Book by Rizzoli (2011)
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elizabethrlilly · 3 months
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CANNOT wait for this coffee table book from Margot Robbie and her stylist Andrew Mukamal. (Yes, Andrew from “Kell on Earth” IYKYK.)
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upnorthtrips · 5 months
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Do Remember! The Golden Era of NYC Hip-Hop Mixtapes is the first comprehensive deep-dive oral and visual history of the golden era of hip-hop mixtape culture in New York City. From street corners to corner offices, mixtapes made a huge impact on the music industry and hip-hop culture in New York City during the late ’80s, ’90s, and early 2000s. Mixtapes helped dictate what rap songs were hot in the clubs, on the radio, and in the streets, and they influenced which artists would get signed to record deals. Mixtapes also showcased which DJs had the most skills and creativity, and who had the juice to pull the illest exclusives. Do Remember! combines the best elements of oral and pictorial histories to explore the evolution of mixtapes as a crucial component of New York City hip-hop culture. Featuring a comprehensive collection of rare mixtape cover art, never-before-seen images, vintage tracklists, and exclusive interviews with Kid Capri, Brucie B, Mister Cee, Ron G, S&S, Doo Wop, Green Lantern, Lord Finesse, Clark Kent, Bobbito, Cipha Sounds, Havoc of Mobb Deep, the late, great DJ Kay Slay, and many more, including a special foreword by Fab 5 Freddy, Do Remember! captures an era in New York City that went on to inspire future hip-hop generations all over the world.
BUY THE BOOK
COP MERCH
LISTEN TO THE MIXTAPE
SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEWSLETTER
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garadinervi · 1 year
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Giorgio Manganelli, A e B, «La Scala», Rizzoli, Milano, 1975. Dust jacket Art: John Alcorn
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paintermagazine · 4 months
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‘Studious!’
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US Vassar college student (1952)
Photographer: ‘Rizzoli’
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booksinantwerp · 11 months
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Iconic photograph of Rick Owens his arm & tattoo. The picture was used for the cover of his 2011 Rizzoli book. follow on Instagram for more
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ordenyprogreso · 3 months
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thevisualvamp · 1 year
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Bookworm
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lukasnovo · 8 months
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The US release of Modern New York is only two weeks away! Sharing one of my favourite spreads. Pre-order now to get your book on 5th September (if you live in the US, the rest of the world will get it slightly later).
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germanpostwarmodern · 2 years
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Often likened to Peter Eisenman it was also the latter who acknowledged him as a forerunner of Deconstructivism: Hiromi Fujii (*1935), the Japanese master of the grid which in the 1960s and 1970s put him on the map of American and European architects and researchers. Fujii, who studied at Waseda University and later worked with Angelo Mangiarotti and the Smithsons, in his buildings very much aligned with the minimalist artists in his quest for an architecture without historical significations. With his grid-based designs Fujii developed highly geometricized, nested spaces that followed a stringent program derived from the requirements of the respective typologies, e.g. the single-family home. An important book on the architect is the Kenneth Frampton-edited volume „The Architecture of Hiromi Fujii“, published in 1987 by Rizzoli, that brings together both Fujii’s texts and works. Rather than focusing on the somewhat confused introductory text by Frampton readers are well-advised to stick with Fujii’s texts and buildings: his concrete boxes that stack cube within cube are reminiscent of Sol LeWitt’s structures and with them the architect sought to plant their pure forms in the spectators’ consciousness. At the same time one can very much read the design and construction process that, although based on box and grid, shows an interesting variation of a very elemental form.
„The Architecture of Hiromi Fujii“ is a slender volume that provides a first introduction to the work of a lesser-known yet by virtue of his conceptual approach singular architect. What the book lacks is contextualization since the book’s authors solely view Fujii through the eyes of Western culture rather than seeking out analogies with Japanese architecture and culture. 
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In Vogue
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zegalba · 2 years
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Kazuo Shinihara for Rizzoli (1982)
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Donna Jordan as Marilyn Monroe for Esquire in 1973. Estate of Antonio Lopez & Juan Ramos, via Rizzoli.
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katz-chow · 8 months
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HWY DIES MY AHTO4CORRECT HATE NE I NEANT RIZZ
HELLOOO??? THOUGHT THIS WAS OUR THING NOW 😨😨😨
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garadinervi · 10 months
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Georges Perec, (1975), W o il ricordo d'infanzia, Translation by Dianella Selvatico Estense, Rizzoli, Milano, 1991 [Fondazione Fossoli, Carpi (MO)]
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Book 380
Hector Guimard (Architectural Monographs 2)
David Dunster, ed.
Rizzoli / Academy Editions 1978
I find it a little bit odd that there aren’t more books about Hector Guimard (1867-1942). At least, not in English. (Although I see that Yale released what looks to be a significant work about him in 2021.) Between 1890 and 1930, Guimard designed and built approximately 50 buildings and 141 subway entrances for the Paris Metro—those incredible Art Nouveau iron and glass canopies, called edicules, as well as designing the now-instantly-recognizable lettering that adorns them. However, as Art Nouveau went out of style, most of his works had sadly been demolished by the 1960s. Guimard may be one of the persons most responsible for the idea of Paris.
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