Showing posts with label book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book. Show all posts

More readings on photography

Over the past few months, I've had the opportunity to read the following books on photographers, aesthetics, history and installation. They are all great reads!

The Body in Question/Le Corps en questions(s)

Daido Moriyama

Kamaitachi - Eikoh Hosoe & Tatsumi Hijikata

Manifestations of the Spirit - Minor White

Illuminance - Rinko Kawauchi

Transformational Imagemaking - Robert Hirsch

Small Things in Silence - Yamamoto Masao

Speaking With Hands: Photographs from the Buhl Collection

Stieglitz, Steichen, Strand

On Photography - Susan Sontag

Revelations - Wynn Bullock

Books on photographers and visual aesthetics

Alfred Stieglitz: A Biography is great read that recounts his life as art photographer, founder of the Photo-Secession movement at the turn of the 20th century, and promoter of the finest art photographers in the pictorial tradition. It also recounts his Camera Works magazine and the art galleries he opened, as well as his marriage to Georgia O'Keefe.


Seaworks 1998-2013 by Paul Kenny is a beautiful book that features his beach-based still life images, all taken camera-less. He collects plants from various beaches, then grows them in glass containers, which he then scans. The resulting images are abstract, surreal. and simply breathtaking




In Looking at Images, Brooks Jensen explores images from a number of artists who have appeared in his LensWork or LensWork Extended publications. Brooks makes enlightening comments about visual aesthetics; these are enhanced with audio clips accessible through Q-codes at the bottom of each page.



LensWork Online

I'm honoured that my wood nymph folio set is being featured in the Readers' Gallery of the LensWork Online site, alongside works and portfolios by other very talented photographers. LensWork is a print magazine and online environment filled with resources and musings prepared by Brooks Jensen, the editor/publisher and art photographer. I have been following the iPad version of the LensWork magazine, as well as Brooks' regular podcasts (over 900 of them!) and the Kokoro online publication of his personal art photography work. His musings are succinct and most inspiring, sprinkled with an oriental sensibility with which I find great resonance.



You can view the PDF that was posted on LensWork Online.

To find out more about LensWork and Brooks Jensen's art photography:

Brooks Jensen's personal art photography website: www.brooksjensenarts.com

Books on books

Below are some of the finest books I've read over the years about book making and artists' books.







The book and photo print as experiential objects

I've just completed a handmade folio edition of wood nymph.

I'm interested in the physicality of books and photographs and in moving them off the wall, shelf and screen into one's hands.

For me, the handcrafted artist book is a 'living' object, offered by the artist-writer to the reader in order to be felt, touched and viewed. It can be an experience whereby one discovers new layers of meaning while engaging physically with the content, the format and the components.

The same applies to a photographic print, often trapped behind a mat and glass, contained within a frame and nailed to a wall—out of reach of the viewer. I have explored various ways of making my photographic prints more tactile and visual, by printing on Japanese washi paper, infusing them with wax, or creating mixed media encaustic images. These translucent pieces capture light and can be viewed suspended, hung away from the wall. They can be touched since they are not confined to frames or trapped behind glass. The pieces can also move with air currents and change as the ambient light does.

The issue, however, especially if one is not really into gallery showings, is what to do with the inventory of prints one produces, other than give them away to friends?

For me, one answer is to create small photographic prints (e.g., 5" x 5"), with or without encaustic. These less expensive images can be part of an artist's book, shared with and touched by friends and colleagues (e.g., ATC style). One can provide a small simple easel to display these miniature pieces.

My recent wood nymph folio case is one example of such a multi sensory experiential piece.





Lauren E. Simonutti's books

Lauren E. Simonutti was a gifted and prolific American fine art photographer. She passed away in 2012 at the age of 44. The sensitive and soft harshness of her images echoed her constant turmoils in the face of mental illness. She lived the latter part of her life inside her old house, capturing images that recorded her inner self. She had a very active presence online on deviantART, flickr and blogger, among others.

Two books on her art are available on blurb:
"Over three and one half years I have spent alone amidst these 8 rooms, 7 mirrors, 6 clocks, 2 minds and 199 panes of glass. And this is what I saw here. This is what I learned." ~ Lauren E. Simonutti

LAUREN E. SIMONUTTI: 8 rooms, 7 mirrors, 6 clocks, 2 minds & 199 panes of glass, c2011
Catherine Edelman Gallery
Cover image: She Left a Light on but They Were Never Coming Back  © 2007 Lauren E. Simonutti

The Devil's Alphabet, 2011
Lauren E. Simonutti
Cover image © Lauren E. Simonutti

You can read an earlier interview with Lauren Simonutti by Susan Burnstine on her blog, underexposed:

http://blog.susanburnstine.com/post/21902234398

Susan Burnstine's 'Within Shadows'

Image © Susan Burnstine

Susan Burnstine is a contemporary American fine art photographer. Her personal style of black and white photography echoes qualities of the late 19th/early 20th century Pictorialist movement. Through ethereal, out-of-focus images, Susan represents moods and elements of her dreams with cameras she built from salvaged lenses and other camera parts.

Her 2011 hardcover book, Within Shadows, contains 100 pages with 45 duotones, accompanied with text written by George Slade, Russell Joslin, Susan Burnstine and Susan Spiritus.

Find more information on her website: http://www.susanburnstine.com/books.htm

You can read an interesting interview with Susan by Jonathan Burnstine on aPhotoEditor:

http://www.aphotoeditor.com/2014/06/11/susan-burnstine-interview/

Eyemazing Editions 2014 Annual Pictorial



The Eyemazing Editions' 2014 Annual Pictorial is out. Edited and published in The Netherlands by Eyemazing Susan (Susan Zadeh), this is a large format hardcover book, filled with fascinating contemporary fine art photography by 42 international artists.

Check out the EYEMAZING EDITIONS website: http://eyemazingeditions.com

Camera Work: The Complete Photographs


Another great art photography book that includes all the photographs published in the 50 Camera Work quarterly journals edited and published by Alfred Stieglitz between 1903 and 1917. It featured the work of Paul Strand and Eduard J. Steichen, among others. The American Photo Secessionists, led by Stieglitz, though part of the Pictorialist movement, had their own take on the future of photography.

In addition to the many photographs, the book includes an informative essay by Pam Roberts entitled Alfred Stieglitz, 291 Gallery and Camera Work in English, German and French. Available on amazon.ca.

Eyemazing: The New Collectible Art Photography


I recently acquired this fantastic oversize book by Eyemazing Susan; it features 423 colour photographs by 130 photographers who were featured in issues of the Eyemazing magazine over the past 10 years.

The Introduction by Karl E. Johnson, as well as the two articles, I Dreams and Memories of a Past Life by Steven Brown, and II Our Body, Our Cage. Our Body, Our Home by John Wood, provide food for thought and wonderment regarding the photography aesthetics of the magazine and its creator.

A great addition to your art library! Available at a great price on amazon.ca.