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BOOK EXCERPT:
Photography has a unique relationship to chance. Anyone who has wielded a camera has taken a picture ruined by an ill-timed blink or enhanced by an unexpected gesture or expression. Although this proneness to chance may amuse the casual photographer, Robin Kelsey points out that historically it has been a mixed blessing for those seeking to make photographic art. On the one hand, it has weakened the bond between maker and picture, calling into question what a photograph can be said to say. On the other hand, it has given photography an extraordinary capacity to represent the unpredictable dynamism of modern life. By delving into these matters, Photography and the Art of Chance transforms our understanding of photography and the work of some of its most brilliant practitioners. The effort to make photographic art has involved a call and response across generations. From the introduction of photography in 1839 to the end of the analog era, practitioners such as William Henry Fox Talbot, Julia Margaret Cameron, Alfred Stieglitz, Frederick Sommer, and John Baldessari built upon and critiqued one another’s work in their struggle to reconcile aesthetic aspiration and mechanical process. The root problem was the technology’s indifference, its insistence on giving a bucket the same attention as a bishop and capturing whatever wandered before the lens. Could such an automatic mechanism accommodate imagination? Could it make art? Photography and the Art of Chance reveals how daring innovators expanded the aesthetic limits of photography to create art for a modern world.
Product Details :
Genre |
: Photography |
Author |
: Robin Kelsey |
Publisher |
: Harvard University Press |
Release |
: 2015-05-26 |
File |
: 409 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: 9780674426191 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
As anyone who has wielded a camera knows, photography has a unique relationship to chance. It also represents a struggle to reconcile aesthetic aspiration with a mechanical process. Robin Kelsey reveals how daring innovators expanded the aesthetic limits of photography in order to create art for a modern world.
Product Details :
Genre |
: Art |
Author |
: Robin Kelsey |
Publisher |
: Harvard University Press |
Release |
: 2015-05-26 |
File |
: 409 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: 9780674744004 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
Figures of Chance I: Chance in Literature and the Arts (16th–21st Centuries) proposes a transhistorical analysis that will serve as a reference work on the evolution of literary and artistic representations of chance and contingency. Alongside its multidisciplinary companion volume (Figures of Chance II), it considers how the projective and predictive capacity of societies is shaped by representations and cultural models of a reality that is understood, to varying degrees, to be contingent, unpredictable, or chaotic. Giving special emphasis to the French context while also developing broad cross-cultural comparisons, this volume examines the dialogue between evolving conceptions and changing representations of chance, from Renaissance figures of Fortune to the data-driven world of the present. Written by recognized specialists of each of the periods studied, it identifies and historicizes the main fictional and factual modes of portraying, narrating, and comprehending chance in the West.
Product Details :
Genre |
: Literary Criticism |
Author |
: Anne Duprat |
Publisher |
: Taylor & Francis |
Release |
: 2024-03-14 |
File |
: 457 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: 9781003828808 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
A roster of prominent artists, curators, and scholars offers a new, entirely contemporary approach to our understanding of photography and media Focusing on the Art Institute of Chicago's deep and varied collection of photographs, books and other printed matter, installation art, photobooks, albums, and time-based media, this ambitious, wide-ranging volume features short essays by prominent artists, curators, university professors, and independent scholars that explore topics essential to understanding photography and media today. The essays, organized around themes ranging from the expected to the esoteric, are paired with key objects from the collection in order to address issues of aesthetics, history, philosophy, power relations, production, and reception. More than 400 high-quality reproductions amplify the authors' arguments and suggest additional dialogues across conventional divisions of chronology, genre, geography, and technology. An introductory essay by Matthew S. Witkovsky traces the museum's history of acquisitions and how the evolution of the museum's collection reflects broader changes in the critical reception of the field of photography and media. Distributed for the Art Institute of Chicago
Product Details :
Genre |
: Photography |
Author |
: Antawan I. Byrd |
Publisher |
: Yale University Press |
Release |
: 2023-03-14 |
File |
: 425 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: 9780300266887 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
Picturing America: Photography and the Sense of Place argues that photography is a prevalent practice of making American places. Its collected essays epitomize not only how pictures situate us in a specific place, but also how they create a sense of such mutable place-worlds. Understanding photographs as prime sites of knowledge production and advocates of socio-political transformations, a transnational set of scholars reveals how images enact both our perception and conception of American environments. They investigate the power photography yields in shaping our ideas of self, nation, and empire, of private and public space, through urban, landscape, wasteland and portrait photography. The volume radically reconfigures how pictures alter the development of American places in the past, present, and future.
Product Details :
Genre |
: Photography |
Author |
: |
Publisher |
: BRILL |
Release |
: 2018-12-10 |
File |
: 281 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: 9789004385474 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
As its title suggests, Negative/Positive begins with the negative, a foundational element of analog photography that is nonetheless usually ignored, and uses this to tell a representative, rather than comprehensive, history of the medium. The fact that a photograph is split between negative and positive manifestations means that its identity is always simultaneously divided and multiplied. The interaction of these two components was often spread out over time and space and could involve more than one person, giving photography the capacity to produce multiple copies of a given image and for that image to have many different looks, sizes and makers. This book traces these complications for canonical images by such figures as William Henry Fox Talbot, Kusakabe Kimbei, Dorothea Lange, Man Ray, Seydou Keïta, Richard Avedon, and Andreas Gursky. But it also considers a number of related issues crucial to any understanding of photography, from the business practices of professional photographers to the repetition of pose and setting that is so central to certain familiar photographic genres. Ranging from the daguerreotype to the digital image, the end result is a kind of little history of photography, partial and episodic, but no less significant a rendition of the photographic experience for being so. This book represents a summation of Batchen’s work to date, making it be essential reading for students and scholars of photography and for all those interested in the history of the medium
Product Details :
Genre |
: Social Science |
Author |
: Geoffrey Batchen |
Publisher |
: Routledge |
Release |
: 2020-12-21 |
File |
: 221 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: 9781000224764 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
In this intimate memoir, Ruth Rosengarten explores the subject of evocative objects through a series of interconnected essays. Evocative objects reflect our attitudes to our own lives and how we seek to display ourselves to ourselves. They are therefore, closely linked to our memories, and how we filter, process and reconstruct them. Rosengarten explores the themes and associations invoked by her own evocative objects, which are frequently shabby things of no material value. They are, importantly, often objects that, in their materiality, bear traces of actions, of something-having-been. Through the associative pathways that these objects have paved, she discusses her experiences with the losses she has undergone, her family’s migrations, and what it means to be a childless woman. This leads her to address the question of what will become of her storied objects and the memories attached to them when she is no longer in existence. This memoir offers an interdisciplinary approach to collecting and compiling fragments of one’s life, paying close attention to the evocative objects that embody us. In doing so, these essays explore loss, memory, childlessness, longing, family history, literature and art theory through material entities which reveal the immaterial ‘things’ at the heart of this study. This book is sure to be of interest to anyone stimulated by memory work and the relationship between humans and their possessions
Product Details :
Genre |
: Biography & Autobiography |
Author |
: Ruth Rosengarten |
Publisher |
: Open Book Publishers |
Release |
: 2022-08-23 |
File |
: 170 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: 9781800643772 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
Product Details :
Genre |
: Photography |
Author |
: |
Publisher |
: |
Release |
: 1900 |
File |
: 680 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: WISC:89057183089 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
Product Details :
Genre |
: Photography |
Author |
: |
Publisher |
: |
Release |
: 1914 |
File |
: 584 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: UOM:39015013735256 |
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BOOK EXCERPT:
Product Details :
Genre |
: Photography |
Author |
: |
Publisher |
: |
Release |
: 1891 |
File |
: 860 Pages |
ISBN-13 |
: UCAL:B2870147 |