We hope to see you at our annual holiday party! We’ll be hosting carolers and Los Banjolinos, a banjo band and serving up red velvet bundt cakes from Kiss My Bundt on Thursday, December 10 from 6-9pm. We’re thrilled to feature two of our favorite authors signing copies of their books: Jim Heimann, Los Angeles: Portrait of a City from 6-7pm, and Alissa Walker, City Walks Architecture: New York from 7-8pm. Remember that all of West 3rd Street will be hopping with sales, food and music during those hours, so be sure to use the complimentary valet parking. (Click here for free valet coupon, now until December 20th.) For more information on drop off locations, check out the West 3rd Street Business District website. See you then!
Posts Tagged ‘books’
Taboo Holiday Party
Thursday, December 3rd, 2009
We hope to see you at our annual holiday party! We’ll be hosting carolers and Los Banjolinos, a banjo band and serving up red velvet bundt cakes from Kiss My Bundt on Thursday, December 10 from 6-9pm. We’re thrilled to feature two of our favorite authors signing copies of their books: Jim Heimann, Los Angeles: Portrait of a City from 6-7pm, and Alissa Walker, City Walks Architecture: New York from 7-8pm. Remember that all of West 3rd Street will be hopping with sales, food and music during those hours, so be sure to use the complimentary valet parking. (Click here for free valet coupon, now until December 20th.) For more information on drop off locations, check out the West 3rd Street Business District website. See you then!
Arcana Books on the Arts
Thursday, December 3rd, 2009
The Ferus Gallery: A Place to Begin ($59.95; signed by the author) is Kristine McKenna’s extraordinary new history of Ed Kienholz, Walter Hopps, and Irving Blum’s visionary Ferus Gallery. Between 1956 and 1966, the Ferus was home to such influential California artists as John Altoon, Billy Al Bengston, Wallace Berman, Bruce Conner, Jay De Feo, Robert Irwin, Craig Kauffman, Kienholz, Kenneth Price, and Ed Ruscha. It was also the site of the first Los Angeles exhibitions by Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Frank Stella, and Ellsworth Kelly. The book recounts the gallery’s history chronologically in transcribed interviews with the Ferus artists, wives and girlfriends, collectors, and other well-placed Los Angeles denizens, and features hundreds of vintage images – including many published here for the first time.
Speaking of Ferus and its artists, one of the season’s most impressive and important books is devoted to one of the gallery’s most influential supporters, iconic Hollywood maverick Dennis Hooper. Limited to fifteen hundred signed and numbered copies, Dennis Hopper: Photographs 1961-1967 ($700.00) is a giant chronicle of a period of upheaval and change that, even at its hefty yet well-deserved price, is sure to sell out from the publisher before the holidays actually arrive. "During the 1960s, Hopper carried a camera everywhere–on film sets and locations, at parties, in diners, bars and galleries, driving on freeways and walking on political marches. He photographed movie idols, pop stars, writers, artists, girlfriends, and complete strangers. Along the way he captured some of the most intriguing moments of his generation with a keen and intuitive eye."
Taschen editor and graphic designer Jim Heimann has amassed one of the world’s most astonishing collections of reference material dealing with the visual representation of Los Angeles. For Los Angeles: Portrait of a City ($70.00) he presents over five hundred images drawn from his and other photographic archives alongside crack essays by Kevin Starr and David Ulin to fashion a massive and sumptuous, near-definitive volume that illuminate the forces that pushed and pulled this crazy burg throughout the twentieth century.
In the spirit of Los Angeles, we offer the work of Los Feliz’s own Mike Slack. Mike’s Polaroids have long been favorites of ours and his new book Pyramids ($30.00; signed by the photographer) completes a trilogy begun with the acclaimed titles coveted by collectors in-the-know: Ok Ok Ok and Scorpio. Just as the Polaroid age sadly is ending, Mike’s third book may be our fondest of his three, adding a romantic nostalgia to the arresting images. The individual photos are gorgeous, and collectively create a sublime cinematic narrative akin to a dream. Celebrate the dying medium at its absolute best with Pyramids
Scott Schuman’s daily internet style-bible The Sartorialist ($25.00) is now available for all eternity as an elegant brick-sized paperback that shows that elegance abounds at every street corner, and that one needn’t recreate David Hemming’s studio hubris from "Blow Up" to capture the perfect fashion moment. Schuman designed the book to be used–thumbed through, referred to, and studied for the fantastic blends of color, shape, proportion, and style it portrays–not just to sit revered on the coffee table. It’s the perfect gift for anyone at all interested in getting dressed, let alone fashion. Throw it in your bag and study when the mood strikes. We also have a few copies left of the luxe limited, signed and numbered hardbound, slipcased Bespoke edition that sells for $175.00.
City Walks Architecture: New York
Thursday, October 29th, 2009
Autumn is a lovely time to visit New York and Taboo friend and client Alissa Walker has just written the definitive guide to walking by and gawking at the city’s architecture, published by my favorite publisher, Chronicle Books. City Walks Architecture: New York features 25 itineraries around the city, each focused around a theme, so you can spend the day wandering Sustainable Skyscrapers, Midtown Modernism or Brooklyn Brownstones. The walks are designed as small cards so you can tuck them in your pocket instead of lugging around a touristy-looking book. ChronicleBooks.com
Traveler’s Bookcase
Thursday, June 11th, 2009
Why go anywhere this summer when Southern California has so much to offer? As I cut the hair of our neighbor Natalie who owns the Traveler’s Bookcase, she loaded me up with great ideas for local getaways to be found on their shelves. Buy one of these titles at the Traveler’s Bookcase and support independent bookstores: Insider’s Guide: Quick Escapes Los Angeles, 52 Great Weekend Escapes Southern California, Off the Beaten Path: Southern California, Weekends for Two in Southern California: 50 Romantic Getaways and Eat.Shop Los Angeles, a collection of locally-owned stores and restaurants, perfect for date nights and (inexpensive) gifts. 8375 West 3rd Street; 323-655-0575
The Man With Kaleidoscope Eyes
Thursday, March 26th, 2009
Finally, thanks to our client and good friend Alan Aldridge for the hare in our banner art this month. The Man With Kaleidoscope Eyes is the cool new book documenting Alan’s career that’s finally available in the U.S. As we’ve mentioned before, this is the catalog to a recent retrospective at London’s Design Museum (hopefully coming across the pond soon!), and is a chock-a-block with mind-bending color spreads that document Alan’s fascinating career from the Swinging Sixties to the present. I love cutting Alan’s hair and hearing all those stories about working with the Beatles, Pink Floyd, Elton John and more. Buy it from Arcana Books or your local book shop.
