David Bergé - A Walk in High Resolution - Jap Sam Books 2020 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
David Bergé - A Walk in High Resolution - Jap Sam Books 2020 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
David Bergé - A Walk in High Resolution - Jap Sam Books 2020 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
David Bergé - A Walk in High Resolution - Jap Sam Books 2020 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
David Bergé - A Walk in High Resolution - Jap Sam Books 2020 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
David Bergé - A Walk in High Resolution - Jap Sam Books 2020 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
David Bergé - A Walk in High Resolution - Jap Sam Books 2020 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
David Bergé - A Walk in High Resolution - Jap Sam Books 2020 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
David Bergé - A Walk in High Resolution - Jap Sam Books 2020 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
David Bergé - A Walk in High Resolution - Jap Sam Books 2020 - Saint-Martin Bookshop

Bergé David

David Bergé - A Walk in High Resolution - Jap Sam Books 2020

A Walk in High Resolution deals with corporeality, sleeping, awakening, and walking through the interiors and fissures of urban infrastructures. Almost touching neighboring bodies, reliving experiences in cities by being absorbed in space that is at once personal, reflective, consumptive, and the other, we walk through cities.
Since 2008, artist David Bergé has been making Walk Pieces, during which he guides participants in silence along a precise trajectory and within a precise timeframe through textures and infrastructures that comprise the city. Walking together resonates with the phenomenological minutiae of street life and for the entire duration of the Walk Piece, participants refrain from verbal exchange and picture taking.
A Walk in High Resolution’ joins together texts by David Bergé, photos by Seoul-based Junyong Cho, and essays by Dieter Roelstraete (author of Richard Long: A Line Made by Walking) and Marcelo Rezende (co-director of the Archiv der Avantgarden in Dresden).
A Walk In High Resolution deals with corporeality, sleeping, awakening, and walking through the interiors and fissures of urban infrastructures. Almost touching neighboring bodies, reliving experiences in cities by being absorbed in space that is at once personal, reflective, consumptive, and “other,” we walk through cities.

96p - EN - 19x26cm - softcover