Description
Garry Winogrand remains one of the giants of postwar American photography—his energetic street work capturing the cultural texture of the U.S. in motion, contradiction, and chaos. Best known for his black-and-white imagery, Winogrand’s work helped define a generation’s visual language, blending humor, grit, and spontaneity with a relentless eye for gesture and human interaction. Until recently, his color photography was lesser known, in part because he shot much of it on slide film that remained unprinted during his lifetime.
Winogrand Color, edited by Michael Almereyda and Susan Kismaric, finally gives that body of work the platform it deserves. This lavish monograph collects 150 color plates, many published here for the first time, drawn from over 45,000 Kodachrome slides made between the early 1950s and late 1960s. As with all the Twelvetrees / Twin Palms titles, the book is a visual feast; the production quality is immaculate—elegant paper stock, crisp image reproduction, and minimalist design that lets the work breathe.
This is a must-have for any Winogrand completist, street photography enthusiast, or collector of finely produced art books. Even though recently published, this limited edition of 50 copies is virtually unobtainable on the market.

















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