Gør som tusindvis af andre bogelskere
Tilmeld dig nyhedsbrevet og få gode tilbud og inspiration til din næste læsning.
Ved tilmelding accepterer du vores persondatapolitik.Du kan altid afmelde dig igen.
Southern Fiction explores the history of the American South using its literary tradition as a road map by focusing on environments which have shaped the imaginations of 20th-century Southern writers during their formative years or throughout the course of their lives and careers. The images portray domestic settings, vernacular architecture, and rural landscapes that visually resonate with the history, culture, and atmosphere of the Deep South. From 2018 - 2021, Tema Stauffer made road trips to Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi to shoot large-format color photographs of settings associated with writers such as Flannery Oâ¿Connor, Alice Walker, Truman Capote, Harper Lee, William Faulkner, Eudora Welty, Tennessee Williams, and Richard Wright. The series depicts the former homes of some of these writers, sites that were relevant to their backgrounds and literary works, and the surrounding architecture and landscapes that shaped their fiction. By examining the roots of its greatest writers, the series investigates the richness and complexity of the South through the evocative settings that defined their experiences and voices.
Portsmouth, documents the deindustrialization of the small River Town of Portsmouth, Ohio that sits on the side of Appalachia.
The Lumen Seed contains photographs, drawings and poems about the indigenous Warlpiri people of Australia's Northern Tanami Desert.
Paradise Wavering explores the fugitive nature of experience, time, light and the photographic medium itself, melding together past and present, and alluding to an uncertain future.
Tiger Legacy examines the tremendous popularity of high school football in Massillon, Ohio through photographs and essays featuring all involved.
Landmark focuses on exchanges between individuals and communities, as well as interventions in the landscape.
A Whole World Blind depicts the realities of war in Northern Syria's rebel-held territories from the brutal to the mundane.
For You! Is a collection of intimate and vibrant photographic portraits of roses in various stages of blossom.
The Photographs in Silent Stages are platforms specifically built as settings for narratives; they are akin to theatrical stages or movie sets. At the same time, they are artifacts from various stages of my life, visual traces of the sedimentary layers that have quietly accumulated over time, each atop its predecessors. As stage or movie settings, these images aim to spark viewers' imagination, to spur them to conjure up a story, a narrative laced with mystery and alienation. That's why I make the lighting dramatic, why I shoot in black and white, why some elements may be too dark and/or fuzzy to see clearly. I generally start with the background, searching the streets for a suitably dramatic setting. Then I wait for something to happen, perhaps for players to enter or exit. Sometimes I arrive too late; the last player has exited. As artifacts from my own story, the images give voice and body to times, experiences and feelings I hardly knew subsisted within me. It was only years after the project was undertaken that I began to understand how the choices I make - of subjects, settings, lighting, composition - reflect the particularities of my life and sensibility. In this sense, these images are relics from a personal archeological dig, a visual memoir of sorts -- an unsurprising undertaking perhaps for a septuagenarian.All of the images were shot over the past five years, either in or around New York or Paris. This reflects the dual nature of my life and culture, split between my native home and my adopted one. I have spent half of my adult life in France and identify as both French and American. My objective is not to highlight the Franco-American split but rather to demonstrate the parallels and how they compose into a single identity.
On an island 1,500 miles from the closest landfall, Coming of Age in Wonderland documents Bermuda's teenagers in all their contradictory glory.
Mark Parascandola documents the nearly forgotten legacy of moviemaking in the desert landscapes of Spain.
Transcendents offers an in depth look at gender fluid spiritual practices in Burma and Thailand.
What Is Left Behind features photographs of items at estate sales that explore themes of memory, mortality, and cultural history.
This project explores Mexico over the last thirty years by highlighting the challenges and beauty of life just south of the border. Collectively, the photographs invite dialogue between Mexico and the United States as viewers on both sides may recognize something of themselves in the pictures.
An essential collection of reportage for those following the conflict in Syria and its impact on the rest of the world.
Stan Raucher reveals an intimate glimpse of human interactions and emotions with his candid photos taken on metro systems around the globe.
Season's Greetings includes reproductions of handmade art objects or limited printings that come from the Estate of Monroe.
Putting a new spin on old histories as my ten year old daughter stands in for a youthful me-the one I remember and the one I was never quite allowed to be-"Stories, 1986-88" pairs deadpan portraits with short narrative texts to bring the past into the present as we relive and rewrite my childhood stories through a restorative approach to image-making and storytelling.
Since moving to New York from Kuwait City Maha Alasaker learned that the everyday American has no conception of what daily life is like for women in modern-day Kuwait. Seeking to address this, Alasaker began making portraits of women in their bedrooms and asking them about their lives. This intimate collection of environmental portraits provides a never-before-seen look at what it means to be a young woman in Kuwait.
"Real Pictures " communicates something profound and familiar. The seriousness of the ordinary human events that gets one from here to there while hopefully initiating the future generation in qualities admirable and kind.
A Crack in the World explores empathy for all sentient beings and the planet in the face of global warming.
Photographs of rebuilt bungalows and mansions on the Jersey Shore waiting for the next storm.
HOMELANDS explores life in South Africa through the experiences of Donald Banda, who resides in an informal settlement in Pretoria. Photographs and first-person accounts reveal the complexities of social and economic inclusion in contemporary South Africa. They also speak to the universal human desire for belonging. As Donald says, "There is no place like home. But if home no longer feels like home, we are lost."
Collections contains photographs of tiny birds, tattered shoes, and clipped ferns from various museum collections.
American Psyche consists of visual metaphors mirroring Elssaser's emotional reactions to America's colonialism and it still lasting effects.
Kingdom of Sand and Cement by Peter Bogaczewicz explores the challenges Saudi Arabia faces today as it rapidly transforms from a conservative and tribal desert culture to an influential world power. In less than a century the Saudis have experienced profound change as they transitioned from living in traditional mud buildings to commencing work on the world's tallest skyscraper. Examining this legacy through large-format color photographs, Peter Bogaczewicz documents a country of sharp contrasts where visual traces of an old reticent society can be seen in the midst of a burgeoning modern culture reflecting the ambitious agenda of the new King and his charismatic son and successor, the Crown Prince, a decisive risk-taker whose bold policies have received a warm welcome by some, yet have alienated others.
Tilmeld dig nyhedsbrevet og få gode tilbud og inspiration til din næste læsning.
Ved tilmelding accepterer du vores persondatapolitik.