Artbook Bookstores



We process orders on Fridays. Please keep this in mind when selecting a shipping option at checkout.

EU shipments are subject to local tax upon arrival. Thank you for your understanding.

Limited editions, out-of-print, signed titles and international shipments will be shipped FedEx. Please DO NOT select USPS. Additional charges will be applied if USPS is selected.



Artbook @ MoMA PS1 Bookstore
22-25 Jackson Ave (at 46th Ave.)
Long Island City, NY 11101
(718) 433-1088 booksmomaps1@artbook.com
Store hours:
Mon, Thurs, Fri, Sun: 12–6 PM
Sat: 12–8 PM 


Artbook @ Hauser & Wirth Bookstore
917 East 3rd St. Los Angeles, CA 90013
(213) 988-7413
bookshw-la@artbook.com
Store hours:
Tues–Sun: 11AM–6PM



       
︎︎︎GO BACK HOME PAGE ︎

VIEW MY SHOPPING CART ︎

EXPLORE OUR THEMATIC READING LISTS ︎

Jim Mangan: The Crick
Text by Judith Freeman, Roman Bateman.


RSVP FOR THE EVENT 


SIGNED BY JIM MANGAN AT ARTBOOK @ HAUSER & WIRTH LA BOOKSTORE!
***
American photographer Jim Mangan began The Crick as a photographic survey of the unorthodox architecture of Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (FLDS) houses in the Utah-Arizona border town of Short Creek. He soon found that the bigger story lay in a group of teenage boys navigating their disintegrating community, fractured after leader Warren Jeffs was imprisoned in 2011. These subjects were children at the time of the fallout, who remained with their families in Short Creek as others elected to leave the town altogether. The Crick is a meditation on religious succession, patriarchal systems, zealotry and fraternity in the life built by these young men. Mangan’s pictures transport the reader into an alternate reality of the boys’ making: where they explore the rugged terrain of southern Utah, northern Arizona and southern Nevada on horseback, emulating old-time explorers of the Western frontier. His “ecological and sociological approach” to this series, spanning five years, depicts the playfulness of youth against the capricious landscape of the American West. In both their real and imaginary worlds, these subjects have gained a knowledge of and closeness to nature that has largely been lost in the conventions of modern life. The collection of photographs is accompanied by an essay by author Judith Freeman and a text by apostatized former FLDS member and artist Roman Bateman.

Twin Palms Publishers
Cloth 10.5 x 14 in. | 124 pgs