Showing posts with label Matt Johnston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matt Johnston. Show all posts

2012/11/05

Invisible City PDF

 

The images above are laptop screen grabs.


Matt Johnston of the Photobook Club recently answered five questions and wrote a review on this blog, and as many of us know collaborated with photographer Ken Schles to produce the iBooks Author designed "Invisible City, A Digital Resource" for iPad. That ebook has now also been made available as a PDF so that more people than only iPad users can look at it. I highly recommend to follow the link above and have a look if you haven't.

2012/09/11

Matt Johnston on Via PanAm by Kadir Van Lohuizen







The images above are iPad screen grabs.


When Martin got in touch with a few questions recently, I mentioned one of the most exciting digital books I had seen was Kadir Van Lohuizen's 'Via PanAm'. I imagine many readers will be familiar with this app but for those who are not, here is just a brief overview.

The tag line 'A 40 week journey exploring migration in the Americas' does a pretty good job at  explaining the project but to further borrow the given text;
Why do people migrate? Where to and for what reasons? What is the fate of the different indigenous populations in the Americas? In Via PanAm, Kadir van Lohuizen investigates the roots of migration in the Americas, a phenomenon which is as old as humanity but is increasingly portrayed as a new threat to the Western world.

It's not easy to describe or relate this app to any others I have seen. It has quite clearly been built around the project and not the other way round. What results from this uninhibited production is an experience rather than a viewing; we are left to make our own journey with Kadir. While we can be guided by date or location there is very much a sense that this interface is a portal to a vast amount of non-linear material rather than a highly structured or rigid narrative.

When you pair this interface with huge depth in content; video, music, photography, maps and so on, you might find yourself getting lost every now and again but I enjoyed this. Not knowing what you would find next or where to find that certain image again is all part of the journey and part of the exploration. It is also worth mentioning here that we can retrospectively follow Kadir on his own journey via his blog entries which appear throughout the project. While photojournalists and media outlets have often been criticized for putting themselves centre stage, here it a supportive feature running through, acting as an anchor and certainly taking no attention away from the project’s focus. 

Via PanAm presents a range of stories, arguments and issues themed under ‘migration’ but to it’s credit could not be accused of trying to force opinion or agenda. To think that this is only one element of a multi platform project including an exhibition, website and soon-to-be book makes it even more interesting, but until said book is released, this is certainly the richest platform on which to view the project. 

I'll make no bones about the fact that I think Paradox are producing some of the most exciting and innovative projects we are able to consume. Because of this I recently had a long chat with Bas Vroege (director) that I have recorded and will publish this coming term, when it is online I shall give you a shout Martin as it might be of interest to The Digital Photobook.

*It is worth noting that I am writing this after the project itself had finished, during the original 40 week journey you could follow day by day as content was uploaded.




Format:
App compatible with iPad only.

Price: $5.99

Links: iTunes and viapanam.org

2012/09/03

Five questions to Matt Johnston of The Photobook Club


First, what is the The Photobook Club?

The goal is to create a space for people to share their thoughts on photobooks as well as to promote the physical book and experience of looking/reading in itself. That space lives online at the photobookclub.org where we choose individual books to look at over a given month and invite others to add their thoughts, but it also lives in the physical world as book clubs. The first of these I ran at the London Photobook Festival back in 2011 and since then I have been organising more myself as well as helping others to set up their own Photobook Clubs around the world - there are currently 6 permanent clubs who meet once a month as well as others who run one-off events and many more who are planning to launch before the year is out. The popularity highlights the level of interest in the physical book as well as in getting together to share that experience but it's also worth remembering that a lot of these events are enabled by digital technology in the form of websites, Twitter and Facebook.

Through the online presence, book clubs and now digital publishing I hope that the Photobook Club as a whole is helping more people see more photobooks, and to enter into dialogue about them regardless of their experience or knowledge.





How did you first come in contact with the photo book Invisible City and Ken Schles?

I first came into contact with the book via an open class I work on with Jonathan Worth at Coventry University. The free class called #phonar (Photography and Narrative) was drawing to a close for the term and with the success of a guest post by Wayne Ford listing some of his favourite narrative photobooks we decided to approach other contributors, photographers, publishers and the like to submit their own suggestions. Only a few books appeared more than once as Invisible City did* and so I was curious to check it out. Unfortunately it's popularity and scarcity became quickly apparent but I managed to see a portion of the book online, it was a short while later that Ken and I began to exchange emails about the possibility of a special Photobook Club feature on the book with the author taking part. It wasn't until a few months later when I met with Ken in New York that I finally got my hands on the book and began the project (to which I owe a huge amount of thanks to Ken for his participation and of course initially for the trust and loan of his own copy).

*Jeff Brouws and Steve Pyke who both nominated the book to the #phonar book list have written their own personal reflections featured in 'Invisible City, A Digital Resource'


Why did you decide to publish Invisible City, A digital resource, and why digitally?

In a nutshell, both Ken and I wanted to realise the project as a way to introduce a new audience to this work, but also to give added value to those who were already familiar with the book in it's physical form. Since it's birth in 1988 as a $20 hardback it has taken on an interesting life of it's own to a point where you struggle to get hold of a copy for less than $800 second hand, and so in part I was also trying to understand this strange life and perhaps even demystify it a little.

When I first started thinking about how I could showcase this work it seemed such a shame to simply create a digital translation, instead I went about creating something that would be of interest not only to those coming to the book for the first time but also those who had a copy, or who had seen it hundreds of times. With Ken's help we could feature scans of his lecture notes from 1990 at the ICP, a video showcasing a handmade alternate version, his own thoughts on the books history and personal reflections from people who have known the book. Doing this digitally meant that it could be distributed for free and that all the rich content we had gathered, could be embedded within one artefact, I think it also makes clear that it is in no way an attempt to replace or to compete with the generative experience that having the book in your hands, brings.





Will we see more digital publications from you in the future?

Absolutely, for starters I will be releasing an ePub/enhanced PDF version of the 'Invisible City' book. It was never an intention for the book only to be available on iPad but just as I was keen to enhance rather than copy the physical book for a digital experience, I do not want to simply 'port' it onto other devices with which we interact in different ways.

Beyond this there are other photobooks I would love to work with in a similar manner and I am also looking out for projects and artists who I can work with in really taking advantage and pushing the boundaries of both physical and digital books/apps. This being said I shall keep focus on the Photobook Club - one of the huge advantages of the changes in physical and digital publishing means that we can become occasional publishers of individual works through on demand printing, newspaper print and relatively cheep and easy to use digital options.


You mostly deal with physical books at The Photobook Club, but are there any ebooks or apps you like in particular?

I really love the HP Magcloud app for iPad, there is a vast amount of great content there and all of it is very easy to browse, download and view. As a rich accompaniment to the images and exhibition I think it is quite hard to fault the Burtynsky: Oil app but the project I am most excited about currently is Kadir Van Lohuizen's 'Via PanAm'. The App that was built to showcase this live project was fantastic in itself but now the work is to become a book and I am really keen to see how that unfolds as we are traditionally used to conversions only heading in the other direction. Bas and the team at Paradox are always looking for possibilities rather than problems in publishing so it is definitely one to watch. (I seem to have avoided the question and gotten back to physical books - sorry about that)



If you would like to download 'Invisible City, A Digital Resource' from the iBookstore, click here
You can contact Matt via email matt@photobookclub.org