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.

Photographic Fields - Joël Van Audenhaege
Denver Mosaic 1961 - René Heyvaert
Lazy Painter - Angela Gjergjaj, Jordi Bucher and Mirco Petrini
Der Erste Rotkehlchen - Le livre
Talk Soon - Erik Kessels & Thomas Sauvin
Seen - Thibaut Kinder
Revue Les Saisons n°3
Jardín de mi padre - Luis Carlos Tovar
Trous gris - Michel Vachey
Matriochka - Fanette Mellier (3ème ed.)
movement in squares - Stefanie Leinhos
Mise en Abyme - Yelena Yemchuk
Followers - Agnès Wyler
Critique d'art n°54
La traversée - Magali Brueder
ARBRES-TRONCS - Zoé van der Haegen
Les oiseaux - Lola Raban, Jean-René Etienne
Una Silla Plegada ( A Folded Chair) - José Quintanar
La Ciudad del Sol - Julia Ramírez-Blanco
Aurore Colbert - Marie Mons
La mémoire de l’ordre. Les paradoxes du sens dans l’architecture moderne. - José Ignacio Linazasoro
Zombie Girls 2.0 - Lucie Lučanská
Pectus Excavatum - Quentin Yvelin
Shanghai Cosmetic - Leslie Moquin 































