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If you were to stand in one spot at an iconic location for 30 hours
and simply observe, never closing your eyes, you still wouldn’t
be able to take in all the detail and emotion found in a Stephen
Wilkes panoramic photograph. Not only does Wilkes shoot over 1,500
exposures from a fixed angle, he also distills this visual
information afterward in his studio, painstakingly composing
selected frames into a single image.Day to Night presents 60 epic
panoramas created between 2009 and 2022, shot everywhere from
Africa’s Serengeti to the Blue Lagoon in Iceland, from the Grand
Canyon to Coney Island, from Trafalgar Square to Times Square. Each
composition is a labor of love as well as patience. Wilkes waited
more than two years to gain permission to photograph Pope Francis
celebrating Easter mass in the Vatican, ultimately producing a
vivid tableau in which the pontiff appears 10 times.The book also
features extraordinary details—works of art in their own right
that highlight the stories contained within each image. A bride
makes her way through Central Park; in Tanzania, zebras gather
around a near-invisible watering hole during a drought; in Rio de
Janeiro, surfers come and go while a man holds a sign reading “No
more than two questions per customer.” “It is exactly these
small stories, these details, that draw people into the
photographs,” says Wilkes. Once discovered, these mini narratives
lend each composition a personal, candid feel.This collection takes
us on a seamless trip from dawn to dark across the world’s most
iconic locations, unveiling the unique ebb and flow of man-made and
natural landmarks like never before.
No one uses the camera like the photographer Niko Luoma. He is not
interested in capturing the world in front of his lens. He uses
light to create his own visual spheres. Using up to a thousand
multiple exposures he applies individual elements of color and form
to the negative, layer by layer. Meticulous calculations and
geometrical skills are the necessary foundation for this. The
results are abstract photographs of impressive, colorful intensity
and luminosity. This book of photos is based on the series
Adaptions, which reproduces famous works by other artists. Luoma
presents a fascinating visual game in which the independent
charisma of the photographs acts in concert with its reverence
toward Bacon, Hockney, Van Gogh, or Picasso. With tongue in cheek,
Luoma thus realizes the avant-garde’s desire to liberate
photography from reproducing reality, allowing it to become an art.
Among private collections of fine photography, the Lane Collection
stands out as one of the most remarkable. Begun in the 1960s and
still ongoing, the collection shines not only for its wealth of
top-quality prints by the great modernist triumvirate of Ansel
Adams, Charles Sheeler and Edward Weston (including the most
important single holding of Adams' work), but also for its breadth.
This volume presents 120 photographic masterpieces from the Lane
Collection, ranging from William Henry Fox Talbot to the Starn
twins, and including along the way work by Arbus, Brancusi, Bravo,
Cunningham, Frank, Fuss, Goldin, Kertesz, Lange, Michals, Modotti,
Morell, Penn, Steichen, Strand, Sudek and nearly 50 others. The
keynote essay by Lyle Rexer trains an acute eye on images from the
collection, defining the vision behind this magnificent grouping.
But it is the images themselves that place this among the most
significant photography books of the year.
Based on the highly successful course at the School of Visual Arts
developed by the author, this book provides a comprehensive
approach to the critical understanding of photography through an
in-depth discussion of fifteen photographs and their contexts -
historical, generic, biographical and aesthetic. This book presents
an intensive course in looking at photographs, open to
undergraduates and general audiences alike. Rexer argues that by
concentrating on fifteen carefully chosen works it is possible to
understand the history, development and contemporary situation of
photography. Looking to images by photographers such as Roland
Fischer, Nancy Rexroth and Ernest Cole, The Critical Eye is the
only book to address the totality of issues involved in
photography, from authorial self-consciousness to the role of the
audience. Its subjects are not limited to art photography but
include vernacular images, commercial genres and anthropology. With
every chapter it seeks to link the history of photography to
current practice. This highly illustrated and beautiful book
provides a much-needed introduction to image production.
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Sergei Romanov (Hardcover)
Oksana Salamatina, Lyle Rexer
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R924
R709
Discovery Miles 7 090
Save R215 (23%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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