Empire of Glass

Title: Empire of Glass

Photographer/s: John D’Agostino

Contributor/s: Paula Tognarelli
Stephen M. Cadwalader
Stephanie Buhmann

Date of publication: 2009

Place of publication: Winchester, MA.

Dimensions: 11×14 inches

Edition size: Regular Limited Edition: 40. Deluxe Limited Edition: 25

Type of binding: Hardcover Matte, Stitched Binding

Number of pages: 72 pages

Type of paper: 206 GSM coated

Number of pictures: 32 full color plates

Type of printing: Digital Press

Printer: Pikto, Toronto, Canada

Designer: John D’Agostino

Language: English

Category: Artist Monograph

Price: Regular Limited Edition: $200

Summary: John D’Agostino’s Empire of Glass:
Louis Comfort Tiffany & the Abstract Sublime

Empire of Glass illuminates John D’Agostino’s photographs of the Abstract Sublime in the forgotten fragments of the stained glass of Louis Comfort Tiffany (1848-1933).

World-renowned during the age of Art Nouveau (1890-1914), Louis Comfort Tiffany was America’s premier artist and designer of prized stained glass windows
and glassware. But by the advent of The Great Depression, Tiffany’s work was openly derided as démodé, remnant of a bygone era, and readily assigned to trash heap. During the liquidation of Tiffany Studios in 1933, collector Vito D’Agostino (1898-1963) rescued the last fragments of broken glass as they were being smashed and thrown away into the East River.

Discovering his grandfather’s boxes of glass buried in his parent’s basement some 75 years later, New York artist John D’Agostino reconstructs the broken pieces of Tiffany glass into large-scaled abstract photographs of biomorphic form and gestural rhythm.
Iridescent whirls of color preserved within the glass juxtapose with withering foil leaf and detritus on the surface of the glass, forming a joyous synthesis of decay and rebirth.

D’Agostino describes his working aesthetic as an imperative of The Abstract Sublime: the existential search for supernatural content disguised in the remnants of natural phenomena. Coined in 1961 by historian Robert Rosenblum, The Abstract Sublime describes the origins of Abstract Expressionism as a continuation of the sacred realms of the Romantic landscape painting of the 19th Century, from Caspar David Friedrich and Frederick Edwin Church to Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko.

Date and place of birth of photographer/s: 1975, Brattleboro, Vermont.

Website: www.EmpireofGlass.com

Book link: http://72.32.9.12/~jdagostino/#/The Monograph/

Donated by: John D’Agostino

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The Indie Photobook Library is TWO!

This past weekend, the Indie Photobook Library celebrated its 2nd Anniversary. Thank you to all the photographers/artists/bookmakers that have made the collection what it is today! I’d also like to thank Advisory Board members Darius Himes, Andy Adams, Shane Lavalette, and Gabe Reed and all the venues that have welcomed the iPL. In the last two years, the collection has grown to almost 1000 books. The iPL continues to promote and showcase the books in the collection through international pop-up and feature-length exhibitions, articles, conferences, guest lectures, and also preserves them as a non-circulating public library. Having a specific collection dedicated to this contemporary movement in publishing allows for the development of future discourse on trends in self-publishing, the ability to reflect on and compare books in the collection, and for scholarly research to be conducted years, decades, and centuries to come. I am looking forward to continuing the iPL mission.

Cheers,
Larissa Leclair
Founder, Indie Photobook Library

“…the Indie Photobook Library is fast becoming one of Washington’s more interesting small collections.” – Mark Jenkins, Washington Post Express, November 9, 2011

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