Spend each day trying to be a little wiser than you were when you woke up, Charlie Munger advises in Poor Charlie’s Almanack. Originally published in 2005, this compilation of 11 talks by the legendary Berkshire Hathaway vice-chairman has become a touchstone for a generation of investors and entrepreneurs. Delivered with Munger’s characteristic rhetorical flair, Poor Charlie’s Almanack draws on his encyclopedic knowledge of business, finance, history, philosophy, physics, and ethics to introduce the latticework of mental models that underpin his rational and rigorous approach to life, learning, and decision-making. It is an essential volume for any reader seeking to go to bed a little wiser than when they woke up. This abridged edition features a new foreword by Stripe cofounder and president John Collison.
From the Moon landing to the dawning of the atomic age, the decades prior to the 1970s were characterized by the routine invention of transformative technologies at breakneck speed. By comparison, ours is an age of stagnation. In Boom, Byrne Hobart and Tobias Huber take an inductive approach to this problem. They track some of the most significant breakthroughs of the past 100 years—from the Manhattan Project and the Apollo program to Moore’s law and Bitcoin—and reverse-engineer how transformative progress arises from the same dynamics that govern financial bubbles. Integrating insights from economics, philosophy, and history, Boom provides a blueprint for accelerating innovation and a path to unleash a new era of global prosperity.
How did we build large language models? How do they think, if they think? What will the world look like if we have billions of AIs that are as smart as humans, or even smarter? In a series of in-depth interviews with leading AI researchers and company founders—including Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei, DeepMind cofounder Demis Hassabis, OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever, MIRI cofounder Eliezer Yudkowsky, and Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg—Dwarkesh Patel provides the first comprehensive and contemporary portrait of the technology that is transforming our world. Drawn from his interviews on the Dwarkesh Podcast, these curated excerpts range from the technical details of how LLMs work to the possibility of an AI takeover or explosive economic growth. It also includes 170+ definitions and visualizations, classic essays on the theme, and previously unpublished interviews. The Scaling Era offers readers unprecedented insight into a transformative moment in AI’s development—and a vision of what comes next.
Efficiency is the engine of civilization. But where do improvements in production efficiency come from? In The Origins of Efficiency, Brian Potter argues that improving production efficiency—finding ways to produce goods and services in less time, with less labor, using fewer resources—is the force behind some of the most consequential changes in human history. He examines the fundamental characteristics of a production process and how each can be made faster, cheaper, and more reliable, with detailed examples from a range of industries: steel and semiconductors, wind turbines and container shipping, Tesla and the Ford Model T, and more. The Origins of Efficiency is a comprehensive companion for anyone seeking to understand how we arrived at this age of material abundance—and how we can push efficiency improvements into domains like housing, medicine, and education, where much work is left to be done.
Brian Potter is the author of the Construction Physics newsletter and a senior infrastructure fellow at the Institute for Progress. He previously managed an engineering team at Katerra, a SoftBank-backed construction startup, and has 15 years of experience as a structural engineer.
The first in a multi-volume work, Maintenance: Of Everything, Part One by Stewart Brand offers a comprehensive overview of the civilizational importance of maintenance. The book explores the insights that can be gleaned from the maintenance of sailboats, vehicles, and weapons, with absorbing detours into the evolution of precision in manufacturing, the enduring importance of manuals, sustainment in the military, and the never-ending battle against corrosion. Maintenance: Of Everything is a wide-ranging and provocative call to expand what we mean by “maintenance.” It invites us to understand not only the profound impact maintenance has on our daily lives but also why taking responsibility for maintaining something—whether a motorcycle, a monument, or our planet—can be a radical act.
Stewart Brand is the cofounder and president of The Long Now Foundation. He created and edited the National Book Award-winning Whole Earth Catalog from 1968 to 1998. His books include The Media Lab (1987), How Buildings Learn(1994), The Clock of the Long Now (1999), and Whole Earth Discipline (2009). He was the subject of the documentary We Are As Gods (2020).
By Stripe Press, they doing it right.
James Clear’s Atomic Habits feels like a clean, precision-cut documentary on change, methodical, motivating, and deeply practical. By focusing on small, repeatable actions, it shows how identity is built quietly through daily choices. Clear and empowering, it turns self-improvement into a system rather than a struggle.
Mel Robbins’ The Let Them Theory reads like a modern self-development documentary, clear, grounding, and quietly empowering. By shifting focus away from control and toward acceptance, it reframes boundaries as a form of emotional freedom rather than withdrawal. Simple but profound, it offers a calm, adult way to reclaim energy, dignity, and peace. Number one book borrowed from libraries in California this year.
Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women plays like an intimate coming-of-age film, warm, sincere, and quietly radical in its view of womanhood. Through ambition, sacrifice, and sisterhood, it captures the tension between personal dreams and social expectation. Tender yet unsentimental, it honors growing up without losing oneself.
Jane Austen’s Emma feels like a stylish, character-driven comedy, bright, self-aware, and gently ruthless in its observations. Following a well-meaning heroine who mistakes control for insight, it explores love, class, and the blind spots of privilege. Clever and enduring, it’s a reminder that growth often begins with being wrong. In a classical binding for your bookshelf curation.
Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility plays like a refined period drama with a modern emotional lens, quietly devastating, observant, and sharp. Through two sisters navigating love and loss, it explores the tension between emotional honesty and social restraint. It’s a timeless study of how feeling deeply and living wisely are not opposites, but partners. Classical binding for your bookshelf curation.
Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre unfolds like a dark, atmospheric romance film, gothic, intimate, and psychologically charged. Through longing, restraint, and moral conviction, it follows a woman insisting on dignity and equality in love, no matter the cost. Fierce and inward, it’s a story about choosing self-respect over fantasy. In a classical binding for your shelf curation.
Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice reads modern feelings. Beneath the romance and social rituals, it examines class, independence, and the slow work of truly seeing another person. Timeless and observant, it proves that emotional intelligence is the most enduring form of rebellion. In pleasant classical binding for your shelf curation and introductory price.
Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein feels uncannily modern like a psychological sci-fi film about ambition, loneliness, and the unintended consequences of creation. Through icy landscapes and intimate confessions, the novel explores what happens when innovation outruns responsibility and empathy or when men struggle with ego. This is not a monster story, but a haunting meditation on being human in an age obsessed with progress. Rediscover in classic binding for curation of your shelf in great price.
This is a 2021 reprint of 'A Magazine curated by MAISON MARTIN MARGIELA' published in 2004.
This limited edition reprint commemorates the 20th anniversary of A Magazine, founded in 2001, and contains the same content as the first edition. You can appreciate Maison Martin Margiela's working methods, including the brand's philosophy such as Dadaism and deconstructionism, and behind-the-scenes stories.
Among only a few complete reprints of the series, this XL edition pays homage to Hokusai’s striking colors and compositions with unprecedented care and magnitude. Bound in the Japanese tradition, Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji presents the original 36 plates plus the additional 10 later added by the artist.
Japanese binding in clothbound box, 17.3 x 11.8 in., 8.62 lb, 224 pages
Multilingual (English, French, German). ISBN 978-3-8365-7572-0
Pre Order, Ships Mid January
It’s not surprising that the man who gave us Mulholland Drive, Twin Peaks, and Blue Velvet can just as easily execute a dramatic, eerie love letter to the female form. Lynch’s passions have always extended beyond film.
240 pages, 125 Illustration(s)
February 2022, ISBN 9782869251663
For the first time ever, the whimsical world of Wes Anderson is the subject of a major museum exhibition. London’s Design Museum in conjunction with La Cinémathèque Française chronicles the evolution of Anderson’s iconic style, from his early projects in the 1990s to his most recent Oscar-winning films.
The official exhibition catalog is the first book fully authorized and produced in conjunction with Wes Anderson. Through a curated collection of original props, costumes and behind-the-scenes insights, including from his personal collection, the book offers an unprecedented look into his world. Includes exclusive conversations with collaborators, including Owen Wilson, Jason Schwartzman, Scarlett Johansson, Ralph Fiennes, Tilda Swinton and Alexandre Desplat, among others, and features an extensive interview with Anderson by film director Nicolas Saada.
Accompanies an exhibition at the Design Museum, London, 11/21/25–07/26/26
296 pages, 250 Illustration(s), 10.6 in H | 8.3 in W
December 2025, ISBN 9781872005843
Pre_Order Fulfillment: Late November
This anthology gathers some of the most interesting successes, and a few instructive failures, published in the first forty issues of Cabinet. Taking the form of an illustrated encyclopedia, the collection includes idiosyncratic entries such as Addiction, Animal Architecture, Goalkeeping, Micronation, Otolith, Sandal, Worlding, and Zoosemiotics. This hardcover book is over 500 pages long and a must for the intellectually curious!
Italy’s foremost contemporary sculptor receives a glamorous retrospective at Fendi’s headquarters, with a luxurious catalog to accompany.
Published in collaboration with Fendi, the exhibition catalog for the retrospective of work by Italian sculptor Arnaldo Pomodoro (born 1926) is fitted within a perforated and die-cut slipcase that recalls the silhouette of the Palazzo della Civiltà Italiana, the site of the show.
Slip, hbk, 11.75 x 13 in. / 192 pgs / 450 color.
March 2024 ISBN 9788857250496
Madame Grès was a French couturier whose designs were partially influenced by her background studying sculpture.
Azzedine Alaïa was an influential fashion designer who rose to prominence in the 1980s.
The first-ever publication bringing together the works of Madame Grès and Azzedine Alaïa, who were born decades apart but shared a passion for sculpture that was influential in their legendary fashion designs.
Exhibition: Paris, France: Fondation Azzedine Alaïa, 09/11/23–05/20/24.
Hardcover, 9.25 x 12 in. / 60 pgs / 42 color.
November 2024 ISBN 9788862088213
With extensive photography and special foldouts, this book recreates the experience of Yoshitomo Nara’s Pinacoteca 2021, a multi-room installation exhibited at Pace in London.
Set among Nara’s recent sculpture and paintings, his small house-like structure, reworked from an earlier project titled London Mayfair House, evokes curiosity and contemplation. The artist’s signature wide-eyed figures adorn Pinacoteca 2021 both inside and out, painted directly on the structure and on wood and canvas hung by Nara himself, as well as drawn on paper, used envelopes, and cardboard boxes.
Hardcover, 9.5 x 11.5 in. / 112 pgs / 90 color / 2 bw.
September 2022 ISBN 9781948701556
A photographic examination of matter as the basis of life
This book chronicles the most extensive photographic project to date from Spanish photographer Aleix Plademunt (born 1980). Started in 2013, Matter addresses the age-old question of our existence by delving into the foundation of all life: matter.
https://aleixplademunt.com/Matter
“Best book design from all over the world”. Stiftung Buchkunst
“The most beautiful Swiss book of the year”. Swiss culture awards
“Mejor libro de fotografía del año 2022”. PhotoEspaña
Silver plate. Deutscher Fotobuchpreis
Paperback, 8.75 x 12.25 in. / 640 pgs / 40 color / 560 bw.
May 2023 ISBN 9783959055758
Chan’s collaborative, unpredictable magazine returns for its latest issue with a playful look into Steidl
Founded by Theseus Chan (born 1961) in 2000, Werk magazine burst forth as a radical vision in the world of publication design. Featuring new drawings and texts by Chan interpreting and recasting the sights and sounds of Steidl Publishers, Manifest embraces spontaneity, imperfection, humor, play and the unpredictable.
224 pages, 216 images, Hardback, English ISBN 978-3-96999-421-4
1st Edition August 2025
The Walther Collection is a private art collection and foundation dedicated to contemporary photography and lens-based art.
A large-format paperback presenting an extensive history of the Walther Collection, complete with a select illustrated chronology and overview of the collection’s 53 exhibitions and 18 publications.
Inside the Walther Collection’s project space in downtown Chelsea and its role as a workshop, research center and forum for contemporary photography.
Paperback, 6.75 x 9.75 in. / 480 pgs / 312 color / 185 bw.
December 2025 ISBN 9783969994283
Charles Eames and Ray Eames, American designers with a studio in Southern California. Among their most well-known designs are the Eames Lounge Chair, the molded plywood chair and the molded plastic rocking chair.
Originally published in 2007, this is a revised edition look at Eames furniture including drawings, plans, models, prototypes and production examples, and manufacturing correspondence related to 100+ furniture items. Featured pieces include the Fiberglass Chairs (1959), the famous Lounge Chair and Ottoman (1956), the Time Life stool (1960), the 3473 sofa (1964) and the seating for Dulles and O’Hare airports.
6.5 x 8.5 in. / 128 pgs / 222 color
ISBN 9788434314955
Cynical flowcharts and simple instructions make for a tongue-in-cheek guide to tax evasion by Pekko Koksinen. Interviews by Melle Smets, Lora Verheecke.
The Algoffshore series of flowcharts by artist collective Rybn.org presents five ready-to-use strategies for corporations to evade taxes and other social or environmental obligations. At the same time, these cynical diagrams document how contemporary financial engineering allows multinationals and enterprises to optimize profits and maximize anonymity.
Clth, 5.25 x 8.5 in. / 172 pgs / 53 bw.
February 2025, ISBN 9789083449821
The 52nd edition of steirischer herbst, a major interdisciplinary festival of contemporary art in Graz and Styria, Austria, delved deep into the disruptive contradictions and uncanny charms of Hapsburgian Europe and their relevance for the rest of the world. In a three-week-long expanded exhibition of installations, performance works, and discursive events, the festival’s 2019 edition focused on the tension between pleasure and catastrophe in the culinary and aesthetic pleasure zones of our day. Its title was Grand Hotel Abyss—a striking turn of phrase used by philosopher Georg Lukács to describe the European intellectual and cultural scene as it faced the approach of fascism.
A Pleasant Apocalypse: Notes from the Grand Hotel Abyss is the title of the accompanying reader, published by Hatje Cantz this spring. Richly illustrated with full-color images of artworks created for the festival, it gathers specially commissioned texts by philosophers, historians, writers, and artists, offering theoretical reflections and artistic insights into the structure of hedonism in ever-more apocalyptic times.
The book’s contributions tap into the unsettling histories and fascist substrates of seemingly idyllic settings and into the dialectical images of suffering and destruction consumed daily. They reveal how the neoliberal economy extracts surplus pleasure and trumpets the imperative to be happy, all the while generating images rehearsing the end of the world, images to be mistrusted, but never to be taken lightly. These are analyses, confessionals, polemics, and travelogues—contributions to an as-of-yet unwritten critical history of catastrophic pleasures and normalized transgressions.
A Pleasant Apocalypse: Notes from the Grand Hotel Abyss is introduced through a foreword by Ekaterina Degot and David Riff, and features contributions by Ariel Efraim Ashbel, Keti Chukhrov, Goran Ferčec, Riccardo Giacconi, Eva Illouz, Siegfried Kracauer, Stephan Lessenich, Daniel Mann, Marko Radmilovič, Aaron Schuster, Vladimir Sorokin, Hasso Spode, Michiel Vandevelde, Gernot Wieland, and Evan Calder Williams.
Walking portraits of Everything Passes stretching from the 1950s to the end of the 1970s; a few blocks of a famous street the Calle de Junin in Medellin, Colombia.
From the 1950s through the end of the 1970s, street photographers known as fotocineros would photograph passersby on the Calle Junín and offer their images for sale documenting everyday life of bygone eras (along with the clothing, cars, buildings, advertisements, shops and display windows of the time).
Powerful sense of ephemerality and mortality that inheres in the casualness of both the images and the act of walking. Some 400 anonymous photographs were collected to make this volume, over a four-year period. Charmingly designed with a stamped cloth cover featuring a pedestrian in silhouette, the publication includes a meditation on the history of the Calle Junín that accompanies the photographs throughout.
Clth, 5.25 x 4.75 in. / 104 pgs / 120 color.
September 2013, Out of Print, Last Copy!
ISBN 9788415118558
This collection contains 17 stories published by Rulfo beginning in 1945, when “Nos han dado la tierra” appeared in the literary reviews América and Pan. Thanks to a first grant from the Centro Mexicano de Escritores, Rulfo was able to finish eight more stories, which appeared with those already published under the general title of El Llano en llamas (The Burning Plain)
Book in Spanish, Out of Print, Last Copy
Paperback, 5.5 x 8.25 in. / 174 pgs.
November 2005 ISBN 9788493442613
A collection of essays examining key works and individuals associated with the cinema of the sexual revolution.
Free to Love looks at a selection of films from the 1960s and 70s, both commercial and experimental, to investigate how issues surrounding sexual liberation and the undoing of censorship laws manifested themselves in moving-image art from around the world. While the sexual revolution cannot simply be viewed as one unified movement, its conflicts and contradictions inspired some of the most important films from this period, asserting sexual power in an era when "power to the people" was the motto. The essays examine key works and individuals associated with the cinema of the sexual revolution (Radley Metzger, Pat Rocco, Phyllis and Eberhard Kronhausen).
Book includes a DVD of three short films:Desire Pie (Lisa Crafts, 1976),A Quickie(Dirk Kortz, 1970) andNorien Ten(John Knoop, 1972). Also included is a discussion with A.K. Burns, Barbara Hammer, M.M. Serra and A.L. Steiner.
Paperback, 5.25 x 7.75 in. / 128 pgs / 47 duotone
ISBN 9780615934525 December 2014
Art has never been as culturally and economically prominent as it is today.
How can artists themselves shape the social relevance and impact of their work?
In How to Do Things with Art, German art historian Dorothea von Hantelmann uses four case study artists--Daniel Buren, James Coleman, Jeff Koons and Tino Sehgal--to examine how an artwork acts upon and within social conventions, particularly through the "performing" of exhibitions. The book's title is a play on J.L. Austin's seminal text, How to Do Things with Words, which describes language's reality-producing properties and demonstrates that in "saying" there is always a "doing"--a linguistic counterpart to the dynamics envisioned by Von Hantelmann for art, in which "showing" is a kind of "doing." Von Hantelmann's close analysis of works by Buren, Coleman, Koons and Sehgal explores how each of these artists has taken control of how their work conducts itself in the world.
Paperback, 6 x 8.25 in. / 208 pgs / 19 bw.
ISBN 9783037641040
November 2010, Out of Print
Cynthia Hawkins’ work and the Black gallery scene of 1970s and 1980s New York
A record of routine and the everyday, the journal also gathers sketches, notes for new and in-progress works, and responses to contemporary art and criticism, bringing the artist’s reflections into relief. Art Notes, Art also offers a picture of the burgeoning Black-owned gallery scene in New York that Hawkins was an important participant in—including Just Above Midtown, where she had her first solo exhibition in 1981—as well as the women artists’ circle she was an active member of. Art Notes, Art is richly illustrated with works by the artist produced during this key period, photographs and ephemera, and a visual archive of contemporaneous work by her peers.
Paperback, 7 x 10 in. / 200 pgs / 50 color / 20 bw.
December 2024
ISBN 9781954939059
An arresting presentation of the Polish artist’s ever-prescient film and media work
Accompanying the first Italian solo exhibition on Polish artist Artur Zmijewski (born 1966), this catalog presents a selection of past and recent works, including a film inspired by the scientific cinema of the neurologist Vincenzo Neri and the photographic series Refugees/Cardboards.
ISBN 9788836650101
Hbk, 9 x 11 in. / 336 pgs / 570 color.
May 2024
Berlin-based architect and rapper Van Bo Le-Mentzel is the founder of the popular Hartz IV Moebel initiative and website “Build more! Buy less!”
Hartz IV Moebel shows you how to build your own furniture with minimal resources and cost (Hartz IV is the name of Germany’s social welfare benefit). Amateurs worldwide have followed these instructions and built a cube sofa, a “Berliner Hocker,” a “24-Euro Chair” or a “100-Second Lamp.” This inspirational volume offers both a practical guide and manifesto for affordable furniture.
Bilingual book: English, German
Only one available.
ISBN: 9783775733953
144 pp, February 2013
Can’t go wrong with Hockney : art, music, and tech through creative collaboration between David Hockney and James Sellars.
Haplomatics is an animated techno-fantasy that combines original text and music by the American composer James Sellars with homemade prints by the British artist David Hockney. First publication documenting in depth this collaboration.
ISBN 9783777444536
120pp, March 2025
These unseen “peace” photographs, collated and published here for the first time, are introduced with a foreword by renowned street artist and graphic designer Shepard Fairey and text by Peter Doggett. Singer and activist Joan Baez provides the book’s afterword.
Jim Marshall: Peace collects the beloved photographer’s previously unseen “peace” photographs, taken mainly between 1961 and 1968. Photographing across America, Marshall charted the life of a symbol, documenting how the peace sign went from holding a specific anti-nuclear meaning to serving as a broad, internationally recognized symbol for peace. Marshall captured street graffiti in the New York subway, buttons pinned to hippies and students, and West Coast peace rallies held by a generation who believed, for a brief moment, they could make a difference.
ISBN: 978-1-909526-48-8
128pp; 235 x 170mm / 9.25 x 6.75 in.
120 B&W photographs
September 2017
In conversation with Kahlo’s feminine attributes with which she often depicted herself—such as traditional embroidered Tehuana dresses or flowers in her hair—and instead sports a loose-fitting man’s suit and short-clipped haircut. Her high-heeled shoes and one dangling earring remain, however, along with her characteristic penetrating outward gaze. Locks of hair are strewn across the floor, a severed braid lies next to her chair, and the artist holds a pair of scissors across her lap. This androgynous persona may refer to Kahlo’s own bisexuality, while the lyrics of a popular Mexican song that appear at top suggest the address of a lover: “Look, if I loved you it was because of your hair. Now that you are without hair, I don’t love you anymore.”
Personal isolation—its pain and its strength—is a recurring force across the sixty self-portraits Kahlo painted in her career and for which she became celebrated. “I paint self-portraits because I am so often alone,” Kahlo once explained, “because I am the person I know best.”
7.25w x 9"h
48pp, published by MoMA
August 2019
Only accountable to ourselves, Who told you so?! The collective story vs. the individual narrative challenges states of social ambivalence within various levels of cohesion: government, organization, scene and family. Engage in conversation with artists on belonging to find and strengthen your own voice within.
Artists in conversation include Aleksandra Domanovic, Foundland, Gökçe Suvari, R.E.P. Group, Lieven De Boeck, Mauro Vallejo, Monika Löve, Slavs and Tartars, Azra Akšamija, Elena Bajo, Hank Willis Thomas, Heath Bunting, Jacqueline Schoemaker, Job Janssen, Kaszás Tamás i.c.w. Anikó Loránt, Paul Segers, Tracy Mackenna & Edwin Janssen, Boudewijn Bollmann, Daan Samson, Exactitudes: Ari Versluis & Ellie Uyttenbroek, Gillian Wearing, Julián d’Angiolillo, Katrin Korfmann, Ken Lum, Marjolijn Dijkman, Matthijs Bosman, Mireia c. Saladrigues, Serge Onnen, Šejla Kameric, Erwin van Doorn & Inge Nabuurs, Erika Rothenberg, Günec Terkol, Jans Muskee, Keren Cytter, Melanie Bonajo, Nadine Byrne, Ronald Ophuis, Sebastian Friedman
Writers: Jonathan Short, Patricia Reed, Matteo Lucchetti, Markus Miessen, Alfredo Cramerotti, Wim Langenhoff, René Gabriëls, Daniel Miller, Tanja Baudoin, Leon Heuts
Poets: Joost Baars, Serge van Duijnhoven, Krijn Peter Hesselink, Anne van Amstel
August 2013 - Out of Print - Single copy
438pp Onomatopee Projects ISBN: 978-9491677045
Crafty, personal and full with tradition, Fadhel Mourali's family history of basket weaving is akin to queering in its associations with care and rooting
From a local tradition coming out of a small historical world to a tradition involved in a vast queer-worlding of making,The Last Basket Makers from Risa refers to a lineage of artisans producing the enigmatic Hedared basket—from Lennart, the basket’s first ‘last maker’—to Lennart’s great-grandson, Fadhel Mourali. This is his report on an open-ended process of identifying and crafting the material of kinship.
Crafty, personal, and entangled with tradition, Fadhel’s research and own making share stories out of and surrounding the rural community of Risa—the former home of his great-grandfather. Here, a dialogical and productive patchwork unfolds, exploring tradition, evolution, and adaptation. This process—akin to queering—includes expected and unexpected entanglements of care and rooting.
SET MARGINS’ PUBLICATIONS
ISBN: 9789083499307
Pub Date: 11/25/2025
San Sebastián, Spain, 1939. A young Eduardo Chillida mustered the courage to ask a girl, Pilar Belzunce, to the movies. They married eleven years later and remained together for the rest of their lives, as Eduardo, supported by Pilar, developed an artistic practice that would earn international acclaim. In this memoir, their daughter—author and filmmaker Susana Chillida— draws an intimate portrait of the couple’s world, offering insight into their professional, social, and family life. Eduardo is captured not only as a pioneering artist and incisive thinker but also as a husband and a father, while Pilar is shown to be a woman and mother ahead of her time, as well as the “pillar” of Chillida’s life and work.
Both an extraordinary glimpse into the life of a visionary artist and a deeply personal remembrance, this book is, in Susana Chillida’s words, “a love story. A family story. And a story of the love of art.”
ISBN 9783906915951
Pbk, 6 x 9.25 in. / 288pp
November 2024