Kevin Bubriski: Nepal 1975–2011

$150.00

Both visual anthropology and cultural history, this remarkable body of photographic work documents Nepal’s evolution from a traditional Himalayan kingdom to a rapidly changing, globalized society.

Preface by Robert Gardner
Essay by Charles Ramble

Hardcover
10.75 x 11.75 inches

304 pages / 149 duotone images / 52 color images

Co-published with the Peabody Museum Press

Trade ISBN: 9781934435724

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Both visual anthropology and cultural history, this remarkable body of photographic work documents Nepal’s evolution from a traditional Himalayan kingdom to a rapidly changing, globalized society.

Preface by Robert Gardner
Essay by Charles Ramble

Hardcover
10.75 x 11.75 inches

304 pages / 149 duotone images / 52 color images

Co-published with the Peabody Museum Press

Trade ISBN: 9781934435724

Both visual anthropology and cultural history, this remarkable body of photographic work documents Nepal’s evolution from a traditional Himalayan kingdom to a rapidly changing, globalized society.

Preface by Robert Gardner
Essay by Charles Ramble

Hardcover
10.75 x 11.75 inches

304 pages / 149 duotone images / 52 color images

Co-published with the Peabody Museum Press

Trade ISBN: 9781934435724

Photographer KEVIN BUBRISKI has been visually documenting the country and people of Nepal since his first visit in 1975. Sent as a young Peace Corps volunteer to the northwest Karnali Zone, the country’s remotest and most economically depressed region, he spent three years walking the length and breadth of the Karnali, planning and overseeing construction of gravity flow drinking water pipelines. He also photographed the local villagers, producing an extraordinary series of 35mm and large format black-and-white images. 

For nearly four decades, Bubriski has maintained his close association with Nepal and its people. Nepal: 1975–2011 offers an incisive and comprehensive look at the aesthetic evolution of an important contemporary photographer.

With an introductory essay by Charles Ramble, Director of Studies, École Pratique des Hautes Études, Paris, and President of the International Association for Tibetan Studies.