As a child Bernard Sabrier was given a map of the Pacific by his father, and since then the archipelago of Vanuatu has remained in his imagination. Forty years later, Sabrier made the journey
to Vanuatu and this book documents his experiences. Discovered by the Spanish in 1606 and claimed by the French and English in the 1880s, Vanuatu became a republic in 1980 and today subsists
mostly on agriculture and tourism. Such facts inform our perception of Sabrier's pictures but are secondary to his project. These candid images depict the natives with which Sabrier has formed
personal bonds and so is the realisation of a childhood dream in an open-eyed, non-patronizing way.
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Henry Wessel: Traffic / Sunset Park / Continental Divide
$2,625 -
Face to Face With the Great Photographers: Interviews
$700 -
Buzzing at the Sill
$1,244 -
Constructions of Cultural Identities in Newsreel Cinema and Television After 1945
$1,800 -
Where the Roads All End: Photography and Anthropology in the Kalahari
$1,798 -
Juliet Hartford: Huntington Hartford
$1,750 -
Death, Image, Memory: The Genocide in Rwanda and Its Aftermath in Photography and Documentary Film
$4,500 -
Rost In Peace: Automobile Discoveries in the USA / Automobile Fundstucke in den USA
$1,400 -
America’s Endangered Coasts: Photographs from Texas to Maine
$1,750 -
The Lovings: An Intimate Portrait
$873 -
Chance Magazine Issue 7
$1,348 -
Chance Magazine Issue 8
$1,348 -
Edges of the Rainbow: LGBTQ Japan
$768 -
Pastoral
$1,365 -
Starting Your Career As a Freelance Photographer
$700 -
The Statues of Central Park
$875 -
The Promise of Photography
$2,700 -
David Busch’s Sony Alpha A68/ILCA-68 Guide to Digital Photography
$1,223 -
Copacabana Palace
$3,325 -
Loulou the Pug: A Book by MeetThePugs
$415

