Details
This is a special pre-release collector’s edition of Richard Mosse’s first monograph Infra. It features a specially designed cloth cover and is limited to a print run of 500 copies.
Infra, Richard Mosse’s first book, offers a radical rethinking of how to depict a conflict as complex and intractable as that of the ongoing war in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Mosse photographs both the rich topography, inscribed with the traces of conflicting interests, as well as rebel groups of constantly shifting allegiances at war with the Congolese national army (itself a patchwork of recently integrated warlords and their militias). For centuries, the Congo has repeatedly compelled and defied the Western imagination. Mosse brings to this subject the use of a discontinued aerial surveillance film, a type of color infrared film called Kodak Aerochrome. The film, originally developed for military reconnaissance, registers an invisible spectrum of infrared light, rendering the green landscape in vivid hues of lavender, crimson, and hot pink. The results offer a fevered inflation of the traditional reportage document, underlining the growing tension between art, fiction, and photojournalism. Mosse’s work highlights the ineffable nature of current events in today’s Congo. Infra initiates a dialogue with photography that begins as an intoxicating meditation on a broken genre, but ends as a haunting elegy for a vividly beautiful land touched by unspeakable tragedy. Copublished with the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting. Richard Mosse (born in Kilkenny, Ireland, 1980) holds an MFA in photography from Yale University School of Art and a postgraduate diploma in fine art from Goldsmiths, London. He also holds a first-class BA in English literature from King’s College London and a master’s in cultural studies from the London Consortium (ICA, AA, Tate, Birkbeck). His work has been widely exhibited internationally, including at the Akademie der Künste, Berlin; Barbican Art Gallery, London; Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago; Palais de Tokyo, Paris; Tate Modern, London; Dublin Gallery of Photography; and SFMOMA Artists Gallery. In 2011, Mosse was awarded a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship, with a supplemental stipend from the Leon Levy Foundation. In 2006, he received a Leonore Annenberg Fellowship in the Performing and Visual Arts. Mosse is represented by Jack Shainman Gallery. Adam Hochschild (essy) is the author of numerous books, including The Mirror at Midnight: A South African Journey and King Leopold’s Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror, and Heroism in Colonial Africa. He is the winner of numerous awards, including the PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay in 1997; the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for History and the Lannan Literary Award in 2005; and in 2009 the Theodore Roosevelt–Woodrow Wilson Award of the American Historical Association. His latest book, To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914–1918, was published in 2011. Hochschild teaches at the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of California at Berkeley. |
