Skip to product information
1 of 1

Darren Almond. Fullmoon

Publisher:

Regular price $70.00
Regular price $0.00 Sale price $70.00
Sold out
Over 260 images from Darren Almond’s moonlit landscape series. From the Yosemite National Park to Japanese seashores and English meadows, this is a breathtakingly beautiful, nocturnal journey aroun...
Read More
  • 03 February 2015
View Product Details

In Fullmoon, the conceptual meets the poetic: in more than 260 photographs, British artist Darren Almond catches landscapes around the globe, under the particular light of a full moon.

With the shutter kept open for over a quarter of an hour, rivers, meadows, mountains, and seashores are illuminated almost like daybreak, but the atmosphere is different: a mild glow emanates even from the shadows, star-lines cross the sky, and water blankets the earth like a misty froth. The enhanced moonlight infuses the landscapes with a sense of the surreal or the sublime, and with haunting ideas of time, nature and beauty.

The series circles around the possibility of Romantic themes today: majestic American mountains, austere Arctic ice fields, picturesque rocks by the seashore in Japan, and, most intimately viewed, the nature of Britain, whose painterly subjects are closest to home.

This book covers all parts of Almond's fullmoon series from the turn of the century up until today. It features an introduction by Sheena Wagstaff, head of the Modern and Contemporary Art Department of the Metropolitan Museum in New York, and an in-depth essay by writer and critic Brian Dillon.Also available in three Art Editions, all numbered and signed by the artist.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $70.00
Pages: 400
Publisher: TASCHEN
Imprint: TASCHEN
Publication Date: 03 February 2015
Trim Size: 11.81 X 11.81 in
ISBN: 9783836546614
Format: Hardcover
REVIEWS Icon
“…many of Almond’s cragged landscapes seem otherworldly enough to be shot on the moon… darkly beautiful, full of grace and mystery and danger.“

“…an extraordinary hymn to the beauty and preciousness of the natural world.”