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JR

    JR is a photographer and artist whose identity remains unconfirmed. He describes his work as "photograffeur", flyposting large black-and-white photographic images in public locations in a manner similar to how graffiti artists appropriate the built environment. He posits that the street is "the largest art gallery in the world." JR's work challenges widely held preconceptions and the reductive images propagated by advertising and the media. His art combines action and engagement, exploring themes of commitment, freedom, identity, and limits.

    The wrinkles of the city: Havana Cuba
    The Woke Revolution
    JR - can art change the world?
    Wrinkles
    How Old Am I?
    • How Old Am I?

      • 216 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      A first-ever children's visual reference book on age -- and a unique celebration of the diversity of humankind around the globe For young children, the concept of age is abstract when they don't have a relatable context... until now! This book showcases the faces and life stories of 100 people from around the world in numerical order, from a one-year-old to a centenarian, giving children a reference point for each age. Striking close-up black-and-white portraits are paired with read-aloud text that shares personal experiences, wishes, memories, and emotions, leaving readers with an appreciation and understanding of the ageing process. Ages 4-8

      How Old Am I?
    • Wrinkles

      • 40 pages
      • 2 hours of reading

      A lyrical, poignant ode to wrinkles and the stories they tell, by the world renowned photographer and public artist JR This first-ever picture book by internationally acclaimed artist-photographer JR allows young readers to consider the lives and stories of the older people around them. Memories, experiences, and emotions are touched on in a welcoming way, creating the perfect conversation-starter between children and their elders. Evocative black-and-white photographs of faces and simple, poignant read-aloud text consider the literal and lyrical meaning of wrinkles, leaving readers of all ages with a well-justified appreciation of aging and natural beauty. Published to coincide with a major exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum, opening in October 2019.

      Wrinkles
    • JR - can art change the world?

      • 336 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      The most comprehensive monograph on the enigmatic French street artist - now updated to include brand-new work Filled with stunning photography, this extraordinary monograph charts JR's widereaching trajectory and a range of collaborative projects executed across the globe. Created in close collaboration with the artist, it features chapters on each of JR's major bodies of work - from 'Expo2Rue,' which launched his career as a street artist, to 'The Gun Chronicles: A Story of America' published in Time magazine in 2018. A specially commissioned graphic novel by comic artist Joseph Remnant and a survey essay by Nato Thompson tell JR's fascinating story.

      JR - can art change the world?
    • The Woke Revolution

      Up from Slavery and Back Again

      • 89 pages
      • 4 hours of reading

      This publication is an anthology of selected and edited essays associated with the current culture value set described as The Woke Revolution.

      The Woke Revolution
    • Since 2004, the French artist JR has traveled the world flyposting colossal black and white portraits of ordinary citizens on the walls of city buildings. His most recent project, The Wrinkles of the City, where he photographed the city̕̕s oldest inhabitants, imagining their wrinkles as metaphors of urban texture and history. In May 2012, JR collaborates with American artist José Parlá on the latest iteration of The Wrinkles of the City: a huge mural installation in Havana, undertaken for the Havana Biennale, for which JR and Parlá photographed and recorded 25 senior citizens who had lived through the Cuban revolution, creating portraits which Parlá, who is of Cuban descent, interlaced with palimpsestic calligraphic writings and paintings. Parlá's markings echo the distressed surfaces of the walls he inscribes, and offer commentary on the lives of Cuba's elders; together, JR and Parlá's murals marvelously animate a city whose walls are otherwise adorned only by images of its leaders. This volume features the portraits, short biographies of their subjects and photographs of their mural collaborations painted around Havana.

      The wrinkles of the city: Havana Cuba