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Last 7 Days Catalog Additions

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  • 1
    Book
    Book
    London : Phaidon Press Limited
    ISBN: 9780714848563
    Language: English
    Pages: 124 Seiten , zahlr. Ill.
    Edition: 1. Aufl.
    Year of publication: 2008
    Keywords: Fotografie
    Abstract: This is the first book ever published on the famous Russian photographer Boris Mikhailov's fascinating early body of work entitled the Superimposition series. Boris Mikhailov (b.1938) is the most influential Russian photographer living today. An artist, a documentary photographer and a social observer, he has experimented with many photographic styles and his work is highly respected by both the photography world and contemporary art lovers. In this series from the late 60s to early 70s, he has overlayed two colour slides, creating fascinating "sandwiches", i.e beautifully composed tableaux of glamorous naked women, surreal urban landscapes and strange scenes of everyday Soviet life.
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  • 2
    Book
    Book
    Munich : Hirmer Verlag
    Language: English
    Pages: 476 Seiten, [2] Blatt , Fotografien
    Year of publication: 2011
    Keywords: Fotograf ; Fotografie ; Sozialdokumentarische Fotografie ; Ukraine
    Abstract: This volume offers an overview of the career of the Ukrainian photographer Boris Mikhailov. The work of Mikhailov is seen through the eyes of filmmaker David Teboul who completed a documentary about the artist in 2010 – Boris Mikhailov: I’ve Been Here Once Before. Mikhailov is one of the most important artists to have emerged from the former Soviet Union, and for more than 30 years has taken photographs that engage with the idea of the individual living within the historical and political system, the breakup of the Soviet Union and its many human casualties. Extensively illustrated with stills from Teboul’s film including Mikhailov with his work, the book also includes transcripts of Mikhailov’s conversations with Teboul; here he provides insight into both his own work and, more generally, the life of an artist in the Soviet Union before and after its fall. This volume brings into focus Mikhailov’s beautifully crafted and often melancholy body of work, which was relatively unknown prior to the collapse of the Soviet Union.
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Pages: 205 Seiten
    Year of publication: 2006
    Keywords: Israel ; Grenze ; Fotografie
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  • 4
    ISBN: 9657301122
    Language: English
    Pages: 107 Seiten, [2] Blatt , Fotografien
    Year of publication: 2007
    Keywords: Israel ; Fotografie ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: The exhibition "Through the Object" brings together several artists who look at objects. The encounter between photograph and object allows a shared discourse intimately related to the essence of photography as a medium. Two opposite values have been attributed to photography ever since its fledgling stages: on the one hand, the immediate connection to reality makes photography the repository of truth, even if partial or distorted. That is, the photograph is perceived as an image that represents an objective exterior reality. On the other hand, it is frequently claimed that the photograph "says nothing" and, as such, refers to itself alone. In his catalogue article Dr. Yiftah Goldman addresses the transformations of the industrial object from its modern version marked by human traces to the self-sufficient object of postmodernism. He points to the essential difference between these positions--modernism seeks to change reality, whereas postmodernism merely describes it: "The depth of modernism stems from its acknowledgment of several essential gaps. For example, the gap between object and subject, between essence and phenomenon, between authenticity and alienation. Concomitantly with the acknowledgment of these gaps, modernism demanded their erasure ... That is, these gaps were perceived as a problem, as something to be amended ... Postmodernism denies these gaps ... In the absence of depth, postmodern art presents the vast array of phenomena as the surface of an infinite mosaic. The complex relations between phenomena are more than once concealed or denied and even when presented they belong to the surface: connections devoid of hierarchy that defy the contrasting judgments of modernism: essential vs. contingent, essential vs. inessential, original vs. fake, true vs. false." The exhibition moves within these boundaries: objects / photographs imbued with an external meaning, with a trace of cultural discourse whose presence fills the photograph space as an echo; and objects / photographs whose self-sufficient meaning inhabits them. Some photographs in this exhibition exude the "aura" as the presence of a person or her culture, as a trace, memory, wish or idea woven into the photographed object. This gap between image and concreteness, which underpins the modernism visible in the works of Igael Shemtov, Shosh Kormosh and Ariela Shavid, is anchored in the photographed object, in the referral of the gaze to what is absent from the photograph, in the questions these work raise about the medium. Postmodern thought has erased the depth dimension, leaving the surface as sole substance. The object, too, is perceived as self-sufficient. Human traces no longer mark it, no longer emerge from it. It is like the photograph, that "very special image," to use Barthes' words, which "gives itself out as complete--integral, we might say, playing on the word." The works of Anan Tzuckerman, David Adika, Yossi Breger, Guy Goldstein and Dalia Gottlieb feature such visual expressions, which do not represent a reality beyond: the photograph's opaqueness equals the object's opaqueness; the object's life equals the photograph's plenitude. Naama Haikin
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  • 5
    Language: English
    Pages: 87 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2000
    Keywords: Fotografie ; Hasselblad award ; Fotograf ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: This past year Boris Mikhailov joined the ranks of William Eggleston, Cindy Sherman, and Robert Frank as the recipient of the prestigious Hasselblad Award, confirming the international stature and critical acclaim he has earned in the last few years with one-person exhibitions at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, London's Photographer's Gallery, and the DAAD Gallery in Berlin as well as representation in major international surveys such as the Carnegie International. His first book, Unfinished Dissertation, was published by Scalo in 1997, on the occasion of his receipt of the Albert Renger-Patzsch Prize; in 2000, he published his second book with Scalo, Case History, and was awarded the photo book award of the International Festival for Photography in Arles, France. Mikhailov also recently accepted an invitation to teach at Harvard University beginning in the fall of 2000. This new book contains a never-before published series of work from the early 1980s: Mikhailov photographed ''The Dancers" in his hometown in the Ukraine during a period when the former Soviet Union was a reality, before the appearance of Gorbachev and perestroika. We observe the open-air dancing scene with great astonishment; seeing older and younger people enjoy themselves in a way that might be contradictory to the images we might have about everyday life in the old Soviet Union. An essay by Russian art critic Boris Greys and an exhaustive interview make this volume a must have for readers and libraries interested in contemporary art and photography.
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