Salt and Dust as well as other self published books, limited edition prints and collaborative works will all be available on my site for purchase in the coming months. Purchases will directly support ongoing work, new printed projects, collaborations and a continued critical exploration of landscape meaning and representation. Thank you in advance for supporting the creative process. Please feel free to contact me if you have any questions via email: justinjamesking.studio@gmail.com or social media @justinjamesking
Justin James King
Featured in TIME Magazine LightBox
Discover the New Topography of Landscape Photography. "These 14 contemporary photography-based artists take both Smithson and the New Topographics’ approaches to new heights using performance, material intervention and digital manipulation to rethink how they view and experience the natural world...these photographers make us excited to look at landscapes again with ever expanding eyes."
"Geometry of Place" solo exhibition at Brachfeld Gallery, Paris
With gallery director Audrey Bertounesque (L) and exhibition designer Leah Koransky (R)
Photo: Paul Mouginot via 10 Days in Paris
Gallery Owner Ed Brachfeld with fashion designer Haider Ackermann
Photo: A Shaded View on Fashion
See more opening photos at Ten Days In Paris, PURPLE.FR, Diane Pernet
Work included at Paris Photo Los Angeles - Represented by Brachfeld Gallery Paris
Read the Paris Photo LA Agenda featuring "Geometry of Place"
Featured in Executive Director Michael Royce's NYFA article "In Search of a Map"
Michael Royce, Executive Director of New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA), writes about And Still We Gather With Infinite Momentum on the NYFA blog.
Work included in "One if by Wonderlust" exhibition at 24CPW in NYC and the "Mapping" issue of Conveyor magazine
Included Artists: Adam Ryder, Alexandra Lethbridge, Aubrey Hays, Brea Souders, Caleb Charland, Charlie Rubin, Colin Stearns, Dierdre Donohue, Jenny Odell, John Mann, Joy Drury Cox, Justin James King, Mary Mattingly, Peter Happel Christian
Mapping manifests in seemingly endless ways; much like photography, it combines individual experience and collective knowledge, and serves to connect us across space and time. The landscape neatly tucked up in one’s pocket provides both certainty and mystery. Abstract borders, creases, and folds promise paths for tomorrow, while worlds unknown sit on the edge of an expansive theatre waiting to be discovered. And so we explore. —Conveyor Magazine
More about Conveyor here