Alienation is often found at the heart of Italian photographer Cristiano Volk’s work, wherein the human experience is always central. Described by Volk as “a single, neon-hued hallucination”, ‘Laissez-Faire’ is a meticulously curated meditation in which he uses his camera to capture the signs and symbols of capitalism and commodity culture. Individuals no longer experience reality directly, but instead live their entire lives behind screens. He collapses the usual parameters that shape our worldly existences – day and night, inside and outside, public and private, digital and real – into a feverishly imagined new universe, vaguely menacing and drenched in a cyberpunk sheen.
216 pages.


La prise - Florian Javet
WREK The Algorithm! - Aarnoud Rommens, Olivier Deprez
Modern Instances, The Craft of Photography - Stephen Shore
Superbemarché - Coll.
Après la révolution – numéro 1
It was a good day - Jeremy Le Corvaisier
Retour d'y voir - n° 1 & 2 - Mamco
Black Case Volume I and II: Return From Exile - Joseph Jarman
Roven n°4
Tomber dans l'escalier - Jasper Sebastian Stürup
Atopoz - Collectif
Dada à Zurich – Le mot et l’image (1915-1916)Hugo Ball
Jean-Jacques a dit - Angèle Douche
Entretiens – Jérôme Dupeyrat
Zoom Age - Julien Auregan
Bruits - Emmanuel Madec
Pour voir, Emscher Park - Gaëtane Lamarche-Vadel
Manifeste d'intérieurs ; penser dans les médias élargis - Javier Fernández Contreras
Dessins pour Rugir - Virginie Rochetti
Good Company - Paul Van der Eerden
De l'objet (comme un parcours) - Collectif, Sandra Chamaret
Holyhood, vol. 1 — Guadalupe, California - Alessandro Mercuri
Dear Paul - Paul Van der Eerden
Délié - Baptiste Oberson
Le corps travesti - Michel Journiac 









