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Last Call to Win a Solo Exhibition this February. Juror: Harvey Stein
Last Call to Win a Solo Exhibition this February. Juror: Harvey Stein

Photo Book

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By Bootsy Holler

Publisher: Damiani
Publication date: November 2025
Print length: 208 pages
Language: English
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Bootsy Holler: Making It celebrates a formative era in Seattle’s cultural history, bringing together more than a decade of photographs that trace the evolution of the city’s indie, rock and punk scene from 1992 to 2008. Holler was not an outsider documenting a trend; she was part of a tight-knit world of musicians, promoters, and devoted fans who shaped the city’s musical identity after the grunge explosion. Her images capture a period when small venues, dim basements and impromptu stages served as crucibles for a new generation of artists who would soon rise to national and international acclaim.

Through candid backstage moments and blistering live performances, Holler reveals the early creative energy of bands such as Death Cab for Cutie, Fleet Foxes, Interpol, Modest Mouse, Gossip, and the Foo Fighters. She photographs not only the musicians themselves, but the atmosphere surrounding them — the crowds leaning into the music, the handwritten setlists, the worn floors of beloved clubs and the sense of possibility that hovered over every night. Many of these images predate widespread digital photography, giving the work a tactile, grounded quality that mirrors the DIY ethos of the era.

Designed with open-spine binding and bright orange thread, the book’s construction underscores its raw, handmade aesthetic. Holler pairs the photographs with her own reflections, revisiting a chapter in her life when the scene was intimate, accessible and perpetually in motion. A foreword by Megan Jasper, longtime CEO of Sub Pop Records, situates the work within Seattle’s broader musical lineage and honors Holler’s unwavering independence as an artist.

Born in Washington in 1969, Holler came of age alongside the communities she documented. Her editorial and fine-art photography later found its way into major publications, yet the images gathered here remain among her most personal. Making It offers not only a record of a vibrant artistic moment but also an invitation to return to a time when music felt immediate, communal and unfiltered.

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