Thaddaeus Ropac has run its own publishing house since it was founded in 1983, to document the work of artists represented by the gallery and advance the critical dialogue surrounding their work. With over 300 titles published to date, our publications feature new and in-depth research together with quality reproductions of the artists' work and installations, in the form of exhibition catalogues, monographs, compilations of artists’ writings and, more recently, artists’ books.
Thaddaeus Ropac has run its own publishing house since it was founded in 1983, to document the work of artists represented by the gallery and advance the critical dialogue surrounding their work.
Thaddaeus Ropac has run its own publishing house since it was founded in 1983, to document the work of artists represented by the gallery and advance the critical dialogue surrounding their work.
With over 300 titles published to date, our publications feature new and in-depth research together with quality reproductions of the artists' work and installations, in the form of exhibition catalogues, monographs, compilations of artists’ writings and, more recently, artists’ books.
We are proud to have collaborated with renowned art historians, curators and writers, and notable contributions include the essays of Germano Celant, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Max Hollein, Catherine Millet, Norman Rosenthal, Carla Schulz-Hoffmann, Reinhard Spieler and Corinna Thierolf, as well as Nobel laureates Mario Vargas Llosa, Orhan Pamuk and the poet Friederike Mayröcker.
We regularly publish books in collaboration with cultural institutions, such as recent publications with the State Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia; Palazzo Cini La Galleria, Venice, Italy; the Kunsten Museum of Modern Art, Aalborg, Denmark and the Louvre Museum, Paris, France.
Our publications are available to purchase in the bookshops of museums that are presenting exhibitions of our artists, as well as via our online bookstore which provides international delivery, and at each of our galleries in Paris, London and Salzburg.