SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station
SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station
SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station
SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station
SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station
SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station
SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station
SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station
SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station
SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station
SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station
SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station
SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station
SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station
SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station
SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station
SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station

SPECIAL EDITION: David Rothenberg – Roosevelt Station

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$104.00
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$104.00
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Special Edition
Perimeter Editions and the artist are producing a special edition of 50 copies, signed and numbered by the artist and including signed and editioned archival inkjet print (26 x 19 cm, shown in the last image).

Roosevelt Station by David Rothenberg is the winner of the inaugural PHOTO 2021 x Perimeter International Photobook Prize. Selected by a jury comprising renowned publisher Michael Mack (MACK, London), PHOTO 2021 International Festival of Photography artistic director Elias Redstone, artist Emma Phillips, and Perimeter directors Justine Ellis and Dan Rule, the project was chosen from a pool of more than 130 submissions from around the world.

Drawing on a series of photographs made between 2019 and 2020 in the Jackson Heights–Roosevelt Avenue/74th Street train station in Queens, New York, Roosevelt Station proves at once mundane and almost ethereal in its tenor. Here, New York photographer David Rothenberg captures his subjects – commuters, airport-bound travellers, panhandlers, missionaries and others – awash in the radiant, cathedral-like light of the station’s concourse, these otherwise candid, rush-hour images assuming an otherworldly theatrical guise.

In the book’s essay, curator and writer David Campany describes the act of photographing such a building as Roosevelt Station – its unique quality of light deriving from artist Tom Patti’s 2004 glass installation Night Passage, which is integrated into the windows of the station’s main glass wall – as broaching both ‘reportage and theatre’. ‘The social spaces of advanced capitalism are … caught somewhere between surveillance and spectacle,’ he writes. ‘That is to say, such spaces are at once traps and stages, realms of private introspection and conspicuous public display.’ The minutiae of the everyday commute morphs into micro-drama when bathed in glowing magenta, orange, green and blue.

While referencing Walker Evans’ subway portraits among other historical examples, Rothenberg’s hyper-observant photographs take the archetype somewhere unmistakably new. In a cultural moment struck by crisis and division, these images feel like a kind of unifying treatise. No matter who they are, where they’ve been and where they’re going, these commuters walk the same concourses and climb the same steps – each illuminated by a celestial glow.

Roosevelt Station will be launched at PHOTO 2021 International Festival of Photography, taking place in Melbourne and regional Victoria from February 18 to March 7, 2021. The PHOTO 2021 Photobook Weekend takes place February 27–28.

104 pages, 28.1 x 20.5 cm, section-sewn bind with cold glue, Perimeter Editions (Melbourne).

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David Rothenberg is a photographer and educator living in Queens, New York. In 2020, his photographs were included in the exhibition, Collecting New York’s Stories at the Museum of the City of New York. Rothenberg has produced two books with the publisher ROMAN NVMERALS including Landing Lights Park, which TIME named one of the best photography books of 2018. His photographs have been published and written about in The New York Times, Hyperallergic, Libération and featured on The New Yorker’s Instagram account. Rothenberg’s work is in the permanent collection of the Museum of the City of New York and numerous library special collections including the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, MoMA, and the Amon Carter Museum of American Art. Rothenberg received an MFA from Bard College and a BFA from Parsons School of Design.