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A glimpse through the keyhole of history: From the earliest nude
daguerrotypes to experimental nude photography The history of nude
photography is the history of people s fascination with the topic.
Indeed, the photographic depiction of the human body is the only
subject that has enthralled photographers, theoreticians and
consumers over such a long period more than 150 years. No other
motif is as prevalent as this one during all the phases of
development comprising the history of photography, no other is
present, whatever the technique, and is a subject of discussion
within the context of nearly all aesthetic movements. Nor has any
other pictorial topic produced such a variety of specialities as
the nude: from the ethnological interpretation of the body to the
glamour shot, from nudist photography to the pin-up of today. No
other photographic field of application has inspired as much desire
as it has awakened official wrath. 1000 Nudes offers a
cross-section of the history of nude photography, ranging from the
earliest nude daguerrotypes and ethnographic nude photographs to
experimental nude photography. The period of time spanned by this
work is from 1839 to roughly 1939, from the medium s infancy to the
end of the classic modernist period. Content-wise, the book pays
tribute to the full range of pictorial approaches, from the
manually elaborated artistic nudes of the turn of the century,
enveloped in layers of theory, to the obscene postcard motifs which
had not the slightest artistic pretension and were intended to
exert a maximum effect on the buyer s wallet. All the pictures
shown are taken from the late Uwe Scheid s collection, which was
one of the world s largest and most important collections of erotic
photography."
Photographs have a strange and powerful way of shaping the way we
see the world. The most successful images enter our collective
consciousness, defining eras, making history, or simply touching
something so fundamentally human and universal that they have
become resonant icons all over the globe. To explore this unique
influence, Photo Icons puts some of the most important photographic
landmarks under the microscope. From some of the earliest
photography, such as Nicephore Niepce's 1827 eight-hour-exposure
rooftop picture and Louis Daguerre's famous 1838 street scene,
through to Martin Parr, this is as much a history of the medium as
a case-by-case analysis of its social, historical, and artistic
impact. We take in experimental Surrealist shots of the 1920s and
the gritty photorealism of the 1930s, including Dorothea Lange's
Migrant Mother. We witness the power-makers (Che Guevara) and the
heartbreakers (Marilyn Monroe) as well as the great gamut of human
emotions and experiences to which photography bears such vivid
witness: from the euphoric Kiss in Front of City Hall (1950) by
Doisneau to the horror of Nick Ut's Napalm Against Civilians
showing nine-year-old Phan Thi Kim Phuc running naked toward the
camera from South Vietnamese napalm. About the series Bibliotheca
Universalis - Compact cultural companions celebrating the eclectic
TASCHEN universe!
Vienna combines drama and elegance like no other. For centuries the
heart of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, the stately city on the
Danube, has been defined by vast palaces and imperial grandeur-but
behind the Baroque opulence, Vienna is also a place of genteel
coffee house culture, epicurean tradition, and a heritage of both
delicate and daring music, art, and design, from Johann Strauss to
Egon Schiele, from Gustav Mahler to Josef Hoffmann. This volume is
a treasure trove of photography from the last 175 years, following
the evolution of Vienna from imperial capital to modern metropolis.
Like a visual walk through time and cityscape, hundreds of
carefully curated pictures trace the developments in Vienna's built
environment and the cultural and historical trends they reflect,
whether the urban Gesamtkunstwerk of the 19th-century Ringstrasse
or the experiments of "Red Vienna" in the 1920s, when the city had
a social democrat government for the first time. Through these
remarkable photographs, we discover not only the great landmarks
and lesser-known corners of Vienna, but also the ubiquity and the
tumult of its history. We see the cultural blossoming of the fin de
siecle, when radical innovators such as Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele,
Adolf Loos, and Sigmund Freud turned Vienna into a "laboratory of
modernity"; the clashes of 1934; the ascent of Nazi dictatorship;
and the horrors writ by the Holocaust in what was once one of the
most populous and multi-ethnic cities on earth. More recently,
fascinating postwar photographs explore the Vienna of the Third
Man, at once a city in ruins and a hub for spies. The book closes
with the most recent pictures, celebrating the emergence of today's
Vienna-one of the most attractive cities in Europe, in which rich
history once again coexists with international flair and vibrant
contemporary culture.
Swiss photographer Rene Burri (1933-2014) has been wherever history
had been played out. A member of the famous Magnum Photos
cooperative since 1955, he photographed in the Middle East in the
1950s and 1960s, recording the Six-Days and Yom Kippur Wars, as
well as the Vietnam War during the 1960s. His many travels took him
to Japan and China, across Europe and the Americas to report
sharply many of the 20th century's major events. His extraordinary
sense for people and their personalities helped him create
portraits of celebrities such as architects Le Corbusier, Oscar
Niemeyer, and Luis Barragan; or artists Alberto Giacometti, Pablo
Picasso, and Jean Tinguely. His iconic picture of Che Guevara with
cigar, shot in 1963, is one of the world's most famous and widely
reproduced photographic portraits ever. Burri had a close
relationship with Lausanne's Musee de l' Elysee and in 1987 the
museum staged a first exhibition of his work, entitled The Ruins of
the Future, followed by his first major retrospective in 2004. The
museum also hosts the Fondation Rene Burri, which the artist
established in 2013 as a home for his estate. Published to coincide
with a new exhibition at Musee de l'Elysee in spring 2020, Rene
Burri: An Eye Explosion draws from this vast collection. It brings
together for the first time Burri's entire body of work,
photographic and non-photographic. Black-and-white and colour
photographs feature alongside previously unpublished archival
documents as well as book designs, exhibition projects, travel
diaries, collages, watercolours, and other multiple objects he
collected. It offers a new, multi-faceted and uniquely intimate
view of one of the world's greatest photo reporters.
Charlotte March was one of the leading international fashion
photographers from the 1960s to the 1980s. The major retrospective
at Deichtorhallen Hamburg lays the foundation for the rediscovery
of the iconic photographer's oeuvre and offers a comprehensive
overview of all of her creative periods for the first time. From
her hitherto little-known early work, relating to the "Humanist
Photography" movement, that reveals her sensitive eye for the
margins of society in post-war Hamburg, took her to wholly
unglamorous places, to her journeys to Italy in the 1960s, as well
as her highly influential fashion and advertising photography. The
narrative of her imagery for magazines such as twen, Stern,
Harper's Bazaar, Vanity Fair, Elle, and Vogue reveals an
emancipatory attitude and evoke the notion of a new lifestyle and
the social upheaval of the 1960s. The exhibition and catalog
illuminate March's multifaceted work and attest to her status as
one of the most important female photographers of the second half
of the 20th century.
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