Peak is about the Dolomites, the UNESCO heritage Alpine range known as “the pale mountains”. The book illustrates the cyclicality affecting the Dolomites by focusing on the progressive morphing of summer into winter, dusk into dawn, whiteness into blackness, roughness into softness. The apex-nadir binomial frames the continuous pendular oscillation between two extremes. As such, Peak gives back the material fleetingness of the ever-changing Alpine environment through a publication that is at once an insight and an index of the eternal return conditioning the Dolomites.

The volume unfolds as a circular paper dance between opposites continuously swapping the lead. The narrative starts with five completely blacked-out pages that progressively sublimate into an all-white double-spread sitting right in the middle of the volume: the peak of the day, the mountain top, the sharpest, protruding fore edge of the book.

Eldorado maximum - Les commissaires anonymes
Critique d'art n°55
Morph - Camilo García A.
De lave et de fer - Laurent Feynerou
Tanière de lune - Maria-Mercé Marçal
Syrtis Major - Barbara Meuli, Antoine Fischer
Bambi # 4 - Collectif
WREK The Algorithm! - Aarnoud Rommens, Olivier Deprez
Hmm ! - C. de Trogoff
Sights - Henry McCausland
Étrangement seuls - Jean-Pascal Princiaux
SKKS - Gilles Pourtier
Tomber dans l'escalier - Jasper Sebastian Stürup
Handbook. Alternate edition - Marie Quéau
Papier magazine n°06 - Coupe du monde
Mökki n°4
La construction - Perrine Le Querrec
Le dos des choses - Guillaume Goutal
CURIOSITY — David Lynch
In The Navy - Julien Kedryna 































