A close-up of a large, heavy-duty steel paper cutter, its blade locked open above a stack of thick, cream-colored art paper printed with barely legible, asemic markings and faint grids. The metal surface shows fine scratches and subtle oil smears, catching cool side light from a narrow window just out of frame. In the background, softly out of focus, sit neatly banded bundles of small books and a single vibrant, glitchy cover peeking through. Photographic realism with a slightly low angle, emphasizing the mechanical precision and tension between industrial tool and fragile experimental pages. The atmosphere is focused and quietly intense, evoking meticulous small-batch production at an avant garde press.

RPRESS Catalogue

Explore visual, concrete, and hybrid works from our evolving catalogue of boundary-breaking publications.

Works

A stack of slim, matte-black chapbooks with stark white spines, each cover featuring abstract geometric shapes that almost resemble letters but never quite resolve into text. The books rest slightly askew on a smooth concrete tabletop marked with faint ink smudges and tape residue, suggesting an active studio. Cool, diffused window light from the left creates gentle gradients across the covers and elongated shadows to the right. In the softly blurred background, a wall of pinned, overlapping paper fragments and monochrome prints hints at ongoing experiments. Photographic realism, shot at a slightly elevated three-quarter angle with a shallow depth of field, sophisticated and minimalist, evoking careful editorial curation and avant garde literary practice.
A long, narrow worktable in a minimalist studio, captured in photographic realism from a wide, slightly elevated perspective. Along the table, overlapping sheets of various sizes display visual and concrete poetry: bold typographic blocks dissolving into abstract shapes, delicate ink washes, and layered, translucent vellum with ghostly marks. A laptop displaying a fragmented, colorful glitch-art composition glows at one end, its screen reflection faintly visible on the table’s matte surface. Soft, cool overhead lighting mixes with subtle late-afternoon window light, producing gentle shadows and a thoughtful, experimental mood. Background shelves hold orderly rows of unmarked book spines and archival boxes, softly blurred to keep attention on the evolving hybrid works spread across the central plane.
A single, square-format artist book displayed on a low pedestal against a plain, soft-gray wall, photographed at eye level with clean, photographic realism. The cover is off-white, almost tactile in its fiber texture, interrupted only by a small, debossed abstract symbol that hints at language without forming it. The book is slightly open, revealing an inner spread of stark black, hand-drawn lines intersecting with faint digital pixelation, suggesting both analog and generative origins. A focused spotlight from above-left creates a crisp highlight along the spine and a gradient across the wall, while the foreground falls into gentle shadow. The composition is centered and uncluttered, evoking a gallery exhibition of an innovative, genre-defying publication from a sophisticated micro-press.

Reviews

An open risograph-printed book lying flat on a dark, unvarnished plywood desk, its pages filled with dense visual poetry: blocks of grayscale shapes, scattered glyph-like marks, and glitch-like halftone gradients. Nearby, transparent rulers, a metal bone folder, and a small pile of trimmed paper strips subtly intrude into the frame, suggesting a work-in-progress. Overhead, soft studio lighting creates a low-contrast, contemplative atmosphere with minimal reflections. The composition is asymmetrical, shot from a high angle, with the focus sharply on the central spread while the tools fall into a gentle blur. Photographic realism with a calm, sophisticated mood that emphasizes the tactile relationship between text, image, and the micro-press craft.

Aya Nakamura

“Ranger Press is where language, code, and image collide—each title feels like a meticulously crafted experiment in reading itself.”

A close-up of a large, heavy-duty steel paper cutter, its blade locked open above a stack of thick, cream-colored art paper printed with barely legible, asemic markings and faint grids. The metal surface shows fine scratches and subtle oil smears, catching cool side light from a narrow window just out of frame. In the background, softly out of focus, sit neatly banded bundles of small books and a single vibrant, glitchy cover peeking through. Photographic realism with a slightly low angle, emphasizing the mechanical precision and tension between industrial tool and fragile experimental pages. The atmosphere is focused and quietly intense, evoking meticulous small-batch production at an avant garde press.

Mateo García

“RPRESS has quickly become essential for anyone tracking the most daring work at the intersection of poetry, visual art, and digital culture.”