Quite a While
Quite a While
The book Quite a While explores the idea of forming a new whole from the remnants of destruction by reinterpreting the emotional gesture of ripping a stack of photographs. Torn into a handful of piles by Korkmaz's partner after an exasperated exchange, the photographs are ripped from the center, allowing Korkmaz to repair the images by conjoining the halves together to create new images. The mending process speaks to the perseverance of relationships and an urge to re-contextualize frustrated memories, embracing the irreversible yet formative impacts of wounds. One of many such juxtapositions combines a plate of luscious peaches left in the couples' bedroom in Buenos Aires with a view of their kitchen in Uruguay; Korkmaz alternates the sizes according to the space occupied in her memory, allowing photographs that loomed more largely in her recollection to occupy more space speaks to the complexity of love and attachment and the mind's resilient capacity to reassemble, arrange, and mend.
88pp, 8”×8”, 40 photos
Swiss-bound - hardcover
A Subjective View of Cansu Korkmaz by Max Blagg
Apart and Together Essay by Allen Frame
Quite a While by Cansu Korkmaz
ISBN 979-8-218-32375-2