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Capital - Mark Hage

Capital

By: Mark Hage

Paperback | 3 January 2020

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In Capital, Mark Hage reframes the story of gentrification, and in photographic portraits of shuttered retail spaces captures the hidden soul of the city. Exploring the accidental compositions that emerge in the built environment, he invites us to view an alternative to increasingly overmediated spaces in photographs of what is abandoned, altered, left behind, gutted. An elegy to a disappearing city becomes an emotional homage to the labors that built it.

About the Author

Mark Hage, long based in New York's SoHo neighborhood, has long been involved in defining the architectural fabric of the city. He has worked with Rachel Whiteread on her Water Tower, which is now part of MoMA's permanent collection; talked on the intersection of creative forces at the New Museum; and taught at Harvard, Yale, and Parsons on the narratives of structure from ancient times to the present. He is a contributing editor at A Public Space.
Industry Reviews
"Each rectangle is its own poem. If I were teaching painting, I would use Capital as a textbook." -Anne Elliott, author of The Artstars


Hage's own design sense is exquisite: walls of color or lines or blotches, depths of field extending into unlit edges, snaking wires and interior transom windows, all framed to locate the viewer as the sole observer, the watchperson, watching for the next moves of capital. -Ron Slate, On the Seawall

"Capital's images capture the vestiges of this neglect with an eye for demolition's compositional accidents. Hage's camera zooms in on walls stripped down to scarred and textured abstractions, outlets and wires bereft of purpose, and columns that stand sentry over emptiness." -Louis Bury, Hyperallergic

As rents and demand, profit and loss, do their dance, hooks and plaster, paint and particleboard register the churn ... Capital is a compendium [of] behind plate glass, and... a city rapidly becoming something else. -Urban Omnibus

In these hybrid spaces, a spirit of labors comes through, anonymous labors that have come and gone, disparate hands that built the years, the same hands that built the city. In these worlds, there is ambiguity and hope, the emotion of aesthetic surprise. -Public Seminar

At first and perhaps out of discomfort, I walked by the shuttered stores thinking of them as surface, without seeking depth or further understanding. But with time, I started to look inside, lingered, and began to photograph for Capital. -Mark Hage, Lit Hub, "The Private Lives of Shuttered Stores"


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