Possession (Dog-eared Edition)
By Parker Day
Please note: this item is a damaged, unsealed copy of Possession from our retail returns selection. It’s still a good and fine book object.
“No matter what body we possess, we share common human sensory experiences, as well as feelings of potentiality and limitations. But why a body?” Do you identify with ‘your’ body?”—Parker Day
Possession is the latest body of work from Los Angeles based photographer Parker Day. Parker presents forty-six un-edited photographs exemplifying the diversity and unity in the unique possession of self and body.
“This series is about absorbing a reality, absorbing a self, completely absent of rules of what should be.”—Evan Pricco, editor-in-chief of Juxtapoz
By Parker Day
Please note: this item is a damaged, unsealed copy of Possession from our retail returns selection. It’s still a good and fine book object.
“No matter what body we possess, we share common human sensory experiences, as well as feelings of potentiality and limitations. But why a body?” Do you identify with ‘your’ body?”—Parker Day
Possession is the latest body of work from Los Angeles based photographer Parker Day. Parker presents forty-six un-edited photographs exemplifying the diversity and unity in the unique possession of self and body.
“This series is about absorbing a reality, absorbing a self, completely absent of rules of what should be.”—Evan Pricco, editor-in-chief of Juxtapoz
By Parker Day
Please note: this item is a damaged, unsealed copy of Possession from our retail returns selection. It’s still a good and fine book object.
“No matter what body we possess, we share common human sensory experiences, as well as feelings of potentiality and limitations. But why a body?” Do you identify with ‘your’ body?”—Parker Day
Possession is the latest body of work from Los Angeles based photographer Parker Day. Parker presents forty-six un-edited photographs exemplifying the diversity and unity in the unique possession of self and body.
“This series is about absorbing a reality, absorbing a self, completely absent of rules of what should be.”—Evan Pricco, editor-in-chief of Juxtapoz