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The first book highlighting the historical roots and contemporary
implications of the silhouette as an American art form Before the
advent of photography in 1839, Americans were consumed by the
fashion for silhouette portraits. Economical in every sense, the
small, stark profiles cost far less than oil paintings and could be
made in minutes. Black Out, the first major publication to focus on
the development of silhouettes, gathers leading experts to shed
light on the surprisingly complex historical, political, and social
underpinnings of this ostensibly simple art form. In its
examination of portraits by acclaimed silhouettists, such as
Auguste Edouart and William Bache, this richly illustrated volume
explores likenesses of everyone from presidents and celebrities to
everyday citizens and enslaved people. Ultimately, the book reveals
how silhouettes registered the paradoxes of the unstable young
nation, roiling with tensions over slavery and political
independence. Primarily tracing the rise of the silhouette in the
decades leading up to the Civil War, Black Out also considers the
ubiquity of the genre today, particularly in contemporary art.
Using silhouettes to address such themes as race, identity, and the
notion of the digital self, the four featured living artists--Kara
Walker, Kristi Malakoff, Kumi Yamashita, and Camille Utterback-all
take the silhouette to unique and fascinating new heights.
Presenting the distinctly American story behind silhouettes, Black
Out vividly delves into the historical roots and contemporary
interpretations of this evocative, ever popular form of
portraiture. Published in association with the Smithsonian's
National Portrait Gallery, Washington, DC
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