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By Brooke DiDonato

Publisher: Thames & Hudson
Publication date: May 2026
Print length: 224 pages
Language: English
Price Range:
Brooke DiDonato: Take a Picture, It Will Last Longer presents the first comprehensive look at a photographer whose imagination reshapes the familiar into something wonderfully disquieting. With a practice rooted in everyday American settings, DiDonato transforms domestic spaces and outdoor landscapes into psychological terrains where reality loosens its grip and the unexpected quietly emerges.

Drawing inspiration from her upbringing in Ohio, DiDonato creates scenes that balance nostalgia with estrangement. Living rooms twist into dreamscapes, staircases swallow their subjects, and bodies fold, rise, or slip into architectural nooks as though the walls themselves have intentions. Her figures, often partially obscured or eerily integrated into their surroundings, suggest a private world where personal histories, fears, and desires seep into the physical environment. Instead of relying on digital manipulation, DiDonato constructs her images with practical staging, allowing the uncanny to arise from carefully arranged gestures and objects.

Her photographs carry titles that hint at humor, vulnerability, and self-reflection — phrases that mirror her interest in contemporary anxieties and emotional resilience. Works from her noted series A House Is Not a Home appear alongside newly published images, reinforcing her ability to anchor surrealism in relatable moments. Through her lens, the American suburb becomes a stage for quiet revelations, where the internal self is revealed through the choreography of bodies and the subtle tension within ordinary settings.

The book also includes an introduction by Eleanor Sutherland, who situates DiDonato’s vision within broader currents of staged photography and narrative portraiture. A conversation between filmmaker Eve Van Dyke and the artist’s father offers rare insight into DiDonato’s early influences and the personal threads that weave through her work.

With 167 color illustrations, this debut monograph invites readers to linger inside DiDonato’s off-kilter universe — a world where the strange and the tender coexist, and where each photograph beckons with the promise of a story just beyond reach.

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