Perimeter x Dallas Art Book Fair 2025

Perimeter is pleased to be exhibiting at Dallas Art Book Fair 2025! Presented by Dallas Contemporary over the course of two days (March 15–16), the annual book fair brings together regional, national, and international artists, presses, publishers, galleries, and bookstores in the museum’s generous space. In addition to offering an assortment of printed works from local, national, and international presses, the fair also boasts an enriched programming schedule, with engaging conversations and readings with authors and artists; a makerspace for zine and printmaking workshops; activities for kids and families; live music; and culinary offerings from around the city.
At the Perimeter Editions table, you can find many recent publications including James Tunks – ZONE, Rebordering the Archipelago: Asia Pacific Exchanges, Analogue Images, Rory Gardiner, Maxime Delvaux, and Auto-Photo: A Life in Portraits, along with a selection of backlist favourites. To celebrate the recent release of her major artist book The Theatre of War (Perimeter Editions 098), Stanislava Pinchuk will also be conducting an artist talk with curator Lilia Kudelia as part of the fair's program – details below.
Dallas Art Book Fair 2025
Dallas Contemporary
161 Glass St
Dallas, TX 75207
Saturday March 15 – Sunday March 16, 2025
12pm–5pm
ARTIST TALK | The Theatre of War: Conversation with Stanislava Pinchuk + Lilia Kudelia
Join us for an artist talk with Stanislava Pinchuk moderated by curator Lilia Kudelia, where we will explore Stanislava's major project Theatre of War and the visual translation of this film into the printed book format, published by Perimeter Editions. Pinchuk's three-channel moving image work Theatre of War, on view at Dallas Contemporary during Dallas Art Book Fair, recasts the opening lines of Homer's epic poem the Iliad. This film moves across history, language, and geography as it connects past, recent, and ongoing armed conflicts: the Trojan War, the Bosnian War, and the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Stanislava Pinchuk is a Sarajevo-based artist working with data-mapping the changing topographies of war + conflict zones. Her work is produced in full independence, and surveys how landscape holds memory and testament to political events – spanning drawing, architecture, installation, tattooing, film + sculpture.
Lilia Kudelia is a curator and art historian. Her practice involves archival research, the study of cultural heritage, preservation and restitution, and the conventions of memory. She teaches contemporary art at the University of Texas at Arlington and works for the Ukrainian Museum in New York City.