Borrowed Time: Calgary Photographed, 1976 The Present
By (Author) George Webber
Rocky Mountain Books
Rocky Mountain Books
9th December 2021
Canada
General
Non Fiction
779.99712338092
Hardback
176
Width 279mm, Height 247mm
KEY SELLING POINTS:
Georges photographs can be found in Canadian and international museum collections including: National Gallery of Canada, Glenbow Museum (Canada), Museum Ludwig (Germany), Australian National Gallery (Australia) and the Bibliotheque Nationale (France).
George is the recipient of numerous National Magazine Awards (Canada) including Gold Awards in 2010 and 2018, multiple Awards of Excellence from The Society For News Design (USA) and The International Documentary Photography Award (Korea).
The documentary film Lost Horizons: The Photography of George Webber was released in the Fall of 2017 watch on YouTube --> https://www.youtube.com/watchv=0lpKFNawj90
In 1999 he was elected to the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts in recognition of his contributions to the visual arts in Canada.
George Webber is Alberta's preeminent documentary photographer and he has published 5 books of photography with RMB.
Borrowed Time contains 220 of Webber's best documentary work on the changing urban landscapes of Calgary, Alberta.
Acclaimed American photographer Mary Ellen Mark has described Webber as a lyrical poet with his camera.
MARKETING + PROMOTION:
Regional and subject-specific print features, excerpts, review coverage, broadcast and television interviews
Social media campaigns, blogger outreach, digital collateral for online use
Publicity and promotion in conjunction with author's speaking engagements
Outreach to subject-specific organizations, markets and festivals
Excerpts available
Electronic ARCs
Electronic blads
Praise for Borrowed Time:
A picture is worth a thousand words, and in this B-side portraiture of Calgary, George Webber captures the city in all its fallible soft spots. Ice-cold lonely nights of storefront hope; the glory days of Stampede Wrestling; the strange, colourful mosaics of the Calgary Stampede; and a hundred identifiable places of everyman. These are places you know, people you know, feelings youve had gazing on your own city.
Micheline Maylor, Poet Laureate Emeritus of Calgary (201618) and award-winning author of The Bad Wife, Little Wildheart, Whirr and Click, and Full Depth: The Raymond Knister Poems
Experience Calgary through the eyes of George Webber and see our mercurial city captured in slow, vibrant motion. Webbers striking photographs tell stories of this place and its people with insight, humour, and heart.
Shaun Hunter, author of Calgary through the Eyes of Writers
This remarkable collection runs from the punk-hair mohawks of the 1970s to the pale goth roller-girls of later years as the black-and-white images give way to splashes of colour just as surely as Stampede Wrestling gives way to the Calgary Stampede: garish cotton-candy pinks and Tilt-a-Whirl rides, the gaping mouth of a plastic clown, a happy receptacle for our garbage. It is a credit to the singular talent of Webber that he makes such kitsch appear poignant and haunting.
Will Ferguson, award-winning travel writer and author of Happiness, 419, and The Finder
The story of the street. History caught in a glimpse. Nouns that no longer exist. This is a legacy of landmarks a sign of whats to come undone. Lost to the lost and found found to the found and lost. This pictorial documentary exposes the extraordinary in the ordinary and the ordinary in the extraordinary. It is much more than a book of pictures it tells us a story of ourselves it makes us look inside.
Sheri-D Wilson, Poet Laureate Emeritus of Calgary (201820), internationally known performance poet, and award-winning author of YYC POP: Poetic Portraits of People; A Love Letter to Emily C; The Book of Sensations; Re: Zoom and numerous other collections
Brilliant of George Webber to ignore the skyscrapers and the men in suits and all the other measures of sleek success, and to concentrate instead on Calgarys many other selves and moods: the fondness for something showy and loud and crass and gauche; something that can be celebrated in the suite of colours that neon comes in; that shows some leg; that promises you some glory at a cut rate; that often falls flat and is run right over.
Fred Stenson, award-winning author of Who by Fire, The Great Karoo, Lightning, The Trade, and numerous others.
George Webber is a renowned documentary photographer whose previous collections with Rocky Mountain Books include an illustrated edition of Robert Kroetsch's classic novel Badlands, Prairie Gothic (with Aritha van Herk), Last Call (with Karen Connelly), Alberta Book (with Fred Stenson), and Saskatchewan Book (with Lorna Crozier). He is the recipient of numerous National Magazine Awards (Canada), two Awards of Excellence from the Society for News Design (USA), and an International Documentary Photography Award (Korea). His images have been featured in American Photo, Canadian Geographic, Lenswork Quarterly, Photolife, The New York Times, and Swerve magazine. In 1999 he was elected to the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts in recognition of his contributions to the visual arts in Canada. George lives in Calgary, Alberta.