
From Anonymous: Enigmatic Images from Unknown Photographers by Robert Flynn Johnson / src Adele M. Reed via
billyjane
images that haunt us

From Anonymous: Enigmatic Images from Unknown Photographers by Robert Flynn Johnson / src Adele M. Reed via
billyjane

Mark Sink and Kristen Hatgi ::
Kristen in Gords, 2011. Collodion wet plates. / source: Robin Rice Gallery
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The massive industrialization of the photography based on the new models of Kodak in 1888, marked the birth of amateurism, and what could be considered its elitist complement and counterpart, Pictorialism, understood to be the first discourse of artistic legitimization of photography.
Faced with technological standardization and documental utilitarianism, Pictorialism proposed the use of pigmentary techniques that evoked the manual work of paintings, as well as their symbolic, picturesque or sublime themes, in accordance with the aesthetic paradigms of the modern art of the 19th century, which was based on the romantic principle of genius. In some way the concept of “creation” was introduced into photographic techniques, vindicating the figure of the photographer as an author and interpreter of reality. Within this framework, Joan Vilatobà created a series of works which moved between symbolic allegory and customs, and photography through topics such as beauty, death, love, etc., of which Where in heaven will I find you? is an example. | quoted from MNAC ~ Museu Nacional d’ Art de Catalunya




Jean Clemmer– Série “Nues”,1969 ,Tirage argentique sur papier cartoline perlé, vers 1980

Saul Leiter :: Untitled (Inez), ca.1947. Gelatin silver print; printed ca.1947 | src: Howard Greenberg Gallery
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André de Dienes :: Nu aux rochers / Nude with Rocks, 1952. Vintage gelatin silver print / src: gros-delettrez
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