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Gasparini: Field of Images (Hardcover)
Paolo Gasparini; Text written by Horacio Fernandez, Juan Villoro, Antonio Munoz Molina, Maria Willis, …
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R1,107
Discovery Miles 11 070
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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A growing appreciation of the photobook has inspired a flood of new
scholarship and connoisseurship of the form-few as surprising and
inspiring as The Latin American Photobook, the culmination of a
four-year, cross-continental research effort led by Horacio
Fernandez, author of the seminal volume, Fotografia Publica.
Compiled with the input of a committee of researchers, scholars,
and photographers, including Marcelo Brodsky, Iata Cannabrava,
Pablo Ortiz Monasterio, and Martin Parr, The Latin American
Photobook presents one hundred and fifty volumes from Argentina,
Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, Mexico, Nicaragua,
Peru, and Venezuela. The Latin American Photobook begins with the
1920s and continues up to today, providing revelatory perspectives
on the undercharted history of Latin American photography, and
featuring work by great figures such as Claudia Andujar, Barbara
Brandli, Manuel Alvarez Bravo, Horacio Coppola, Paz Errazuriz,
Graciela Iturbide, Sara Facio, Paolo Gasparini, Daniel Gonzalez,
Boris Kossoy, Sergio Larrain, and many others. The book is divided
into thematic sections such as The City, Conceptual Art and
Photography, and Photography and Literature, a category uniquely
important to Latin America. Fernandez's texts, exhaustively
researched and richly illustrated, offer insights not only on each
individual title and photographer, but on the multivalent social,
political, and artistic histories of the region as well. This book
is an unparalleled resource for those interested in Latin American
photography or in discovering these heretofore unknown gems in the
history of the photobook at large.
A collaboration between photographer Adrian Tyler and the writer
and photography historian Horacio Fernandez, to make a photobook in
which the text is inseparably integrated with the image. The
photographs were taken in a disused cigarette factory, which was
essentially a state-owned tobacco manufacturing and distribution
cartel. The texts come from the cigarette advertising archive at
Stanford University and Horatio's responses to the images and
advertising slogans not only subvert the intention of the
advertising but add new depth and new meaning to the work. "One day
we felt we owed a debt to smoke. It had surrounded us for so long
that we missed it. Humo Smoke is our way of settling the score. The
images show the decline of an industry through the ruins of a
tobacco factory. The words have been chosen from among the endless
literature on smoke, especially the advertising slogans of the
business, which promised pleasures as numerous as the drawbacks
they kept silent. Humo Smoke is a written photobook because we
think images are too poetic when there is nothing to read, and
words too ambiguous when there is nothing to see. It is also a
rather melancholy photobook, and consequently a little playful, as
light and whimsical as smoke itself, which never lets itself be
tied down. We dedicate it both to those who like spending the hours
watching it sway back and forth, and to those who believe it casts
the most evil shadow". Text in English and Spanish.
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