Perimeter x EMOP Berlin 2025

Perimeter is delighted to be participating in the European Month of Photography (EMOP) Berlin in 2025! From February 28 – March 2, Perimeter Editions will be exhibiting as part of the EMOP Opening Days, a diverse program in the festival centre at the Akademie der Künste where visitors can delve into contemporary photographic practice and discourse.
EMOP Opening Days will be enhanced by the new format Photos in Books, where photo book publishers will present their new publications in numerous book talks. At the Perimeter table, you can find recent photobooks Analogue Images, Rory Gardiner, Maxime Delvaux, Auto-Photo: A Life in Portraits, Banjo McLachlan – 31 Beach Looks, Patrick Pound – Windows, and more. Plus, we're thrilled to be launching James Tunks' latest photobook ZONE at the festival, coinciding with an artist talk as part of the Photos in Books program – details below!
Photos in Books at EMOP Berlin
Akademie der Künste
Hanseatenweg 10
10557 Berlin-Tiergarten
Germany
Friday, February 28: 3pm–7pm
Saturday, March 1: 10am–7pm
Sunday, March 2: 10am–4pm
BOOK TALK
Photos in Books: Perimeter Editions I James Tunks – ZONE: The Photograph as Past and Future
Our philosophical understanding of photography may be guided by concepts of time and the past, but our tools for making images are embedded in the aggressive advance of technological innovation and forward thinking. Cameras now have the ability to detect, capture, process, describe, augment, predict and 'think' in ever more comprehensive ways. James Tunks' new book ZONE moves at the edges of new and old knowledge. With images of birds of prey and the insignia of the Apollo mission alongside remote Icelandic landscapes used for lunar exploration, dazzling full-frame shots of the sun and hyper-detailed telescopic images of the moon, the images in ZONE are rich in symbolism and metaphor. In this world, imaging technology vacillates between the ability to capture microscopic detail and the ability to cause mass disruption.
Join the Australian-born, Vienna-based artist James Tunks in conservation with Perimeter co-director and editor Dan Rule, as they discuss this new photobook and James' wider photographic practice.
Friday, February 28
3.45pm–4.30pm
at Photos in Books EMOP