Leanne Shapton
@shaptonia
“Basketball inspires my work, not only with its data and information, but the little details of the sport that tell us about what we’re looking at: colors, lines, paths, boxes, rules.” —Andrew Kuo (Andrew Kuo), interviewed by Leanne Shapton (Leanne Shapton) go.nybooks.com/3ehqxJ0
Was fun to talk to Jon Klassen jon klassen about his hand painted cover, the Canadian shield and terrifying National Film Board of Canada short films.
In the second New York Review Art Newsletter, Art Editor Leanne Shapton writes about the encroachment of autumn, Edvard Munch’s bear, and medieval hair. go.nybooks.com/3SncgbZ
via The New York Times Rebecca Godfrey: brilliant person, writer, mother, teacher nytimes.com/2022/11/04/boo…
Great review for Susan Barba in the FT! American Wildflowers by Susan Barba — in full bloom ft.com/content/888b80…
Books that tap into the oddity of existence, the unusual moments that interfere with any firm sense of what "reality" is. Thanks to Marta Balcewicz for this list! 49thshelf.com/Blog/2023/05/1… Book*hug Press
Wir haben im Buch geblättert, uns in die Texte von Niklas Maak verliebt und uns von den Illustrationen von Leanne Shapton verzaubern lassen. Am 16. Januar sind beide zur Deutschlandpremiere in der Urania zu Gast. Karten: uraniaberlin.reservix.de/p/reservix/eve… Hanser Literatur
Our 8/15 issue is now online, with Leanne Shapton on swimming with sharks, Ursula Lindsey on Isabella Hammad’s Hamlet, Adam Thirlwell on Karl Lagerfeld, colin grant on Bob Marley, Christopher Benfey on Melville mania, Susan Faludi on front page women, and more go.nybooks.com/3SlTYe8
“Bocetos de natación”, de Leanne Shapton Publicado por: Blatt & Ríos 👉tinyurl.com/44p8ad3r #LibroDelDía En este libro, Leanne Shapton, con una prosa elegante, meditativa y de ligera belleza, explora una vida que transcurre siempre alrededor del agua.
Hoy nos ha llegado la cubierta de nuestro próximo lanzamiento: ‘Libro de visitas: historias de fantasmas’ de Leanne Shapton traducido por Ana Flecha Marco. Ana Flecha Marco @shaptonia ¿Cómo sería el libro de visitas de nuestras vidas si pudieran leerse en él las huellas de los muertos?