Description: 2010 The Mormons First Edition HCDJ Photo Art Hardcover w/ DJ Mark Hedengren LDS_____________________________________________ The Mormonsby Mark HedengrenForeword by Robert MillettPublished by Red Finch (2010)FIRST EDITION HARDCOVER w DUST JACKET, SIGNED BY AUTHOR, MARK HEDENGREN Condition:EXCELLENT First Edition Hardcover with Dust Jacket SIGNED BY AUTHOR, MARK HEDENGREN on the inside front cover! This is a beautiful large format (very heavy) hardcover book of art prints that retails for $49.95 and is worth every penny! Please read the excerpts below for a better idea of what this artists work is about. The book itself is perfect - The binding is tight and the cover is in great condition! None of the pages has any writing, underlining, high-lighting, rips, tears, bends, or folds. The dust jacket does have some very minor wear. Please see my photos and email with any questions! About the author:Mark Hedengren is the author of The Mormons and Ansel Adams and Dorothea Lange’s Three Mormon Towns. He also directed the film Sundance Skippy. Mark is the 2013 recipient of the Utah Arts Council Visual Arts Fellowship. His work has been exhibited in numerous juried shows nationally and internationally. He has had solo shows in the Utah Museum of Contemporary Art, St. George Museum of Art and with the Utah Arts Council. Mark received a BFA from Brigham Young University and an MFA from the Glasgow School of Art For an awesome interview with the author, please check out mormonartist net and go to the interview section.Below are some excerpts from this interview about this book: I made The Mormons because I really wanted the book to exist. I love photography books and I really wished a book like The Mormons existed. The problem was nobody was making it, so I had to. It was a lot of work and a very difficult project because of the subject matter. If I had done a book entitled The Scottish People or The Jews, my life would have been a lot easier. But in a way I don’t believe the artist can pick their subject matter. They have to do what they are drawn to and what they care enough about not to quit. That’s really the question when you talk about a large body of work. It’s not why you start a project, it’s why you finish it. I finished The Mormons because I really wanted to make a book that would portray Mormons as people in an academically credible way, a way an educated person who wasn’t Mormon would respect. I have to say, though, that there is so much misunderstanding about Mormons in the world that the limit of what I wanted to say was to show Mormons and let them talk without pushing a huge agenda one way or another, without the agenda of conversion to Mormonism or the agenda of showing Mormons like they are stupid, naive people who are plotting to take over the world, which is an odd contradiction of negative stereotypes, but it’s the one that is advanced by much of the artistic world. The book is full of so many experiences I could write another book about making the book. That’s why I got into photography—the experiences.I started out by writing a weekly column for The Daily Herald. I moved more and more toward photography because I wanted to get out into the world. It’s such an exciting place. I met many of my best friends of my life while traveling. The best people in the world travel. It’s like when you buy a plane ticket and join that community, you are enrolling yourself in the most elite amazing university in the world and it only takes an $800 plane ticket to Paris. But as far as a key experience goes, getting my camera stolen in Rome was a big setback. I lost so many excellent photographs and over a month of work. Insurance replaced the equipment, but losing the work stinks. I now back up all my work while I’m photographing. I keep a hard drive at the hotel and a hard drive with me. That way if one gets stolen I have a copy and it’s very unlikely both will get stolen at the same time. The photograph of the plan of salvation drawn in chalk outside a New York City subway stop was an amazing gift. I was walking to The Cloisters museum when I saw it. I said to myself, “This is amazing. I need to photograph this.” I walked back to my apartment and got my camera. It’s funny because I worked very hard in logistics to be in the position to photograph things for The Mormons, but this image—which is one of my favorites in the book—just happened on a morning stroll to a museum. Copyright © 2018-2024 TDM Inc. The photos and text in this listing are copyrighted. I spend lots of time writing up my descriptions and despise it when un-original losers cut and paste my descriptions in as their own. It is against ebay policy and if you are caught, you will be reported to ebay and could be sued for copyright infringement and damages.
Price: 18.99 USD
Location: Orem, Utah
End Time: 2024-10-06T05:35:25.000Z
Shipping Cost: 9.54 USD
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Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Modification Description: SIGNED BY AUTHOR
Signed By: author, Mark Hedengren
Book Title: Mormons
Book Series: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Country of Manufacture: United States
Original Language: English
Vintage: No
Personalize: No
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Personalized: No
Features: 1st Edition, Dust Jacket, Illustrated
Topic: Mormonism
Subjects: Religion & Beliefs
Signed: Yes
Ex Libris: No
Title: The Mormons
Narrative Type: Nonfiction
Publisher: Red Finch LLC
Intended Audience: Adults, Young Adults
Inscribed: No
Subject: Religion & Spirituality
Edition: First Edition
Publication Year: 20100000
Type: Illustrated Book
Era: 2010s
Illustrator: Mark Hedengren
Special Attributes: 1st Edition, Dust Jacket, Illustrated, SIGNED BY AUTHOR
Country: USA
Author: Mark Hedengren, Robert Millett
Genre: Mormons, Art & Culture, Photography
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States