 … don, Despatin & Gobeli, Robert Doisneau, Tom Drahos, Philippe Dufour, Gilbert Fastenaekens, Jean-Louis Garnell, Albert Giordan, Frank Gohike, Yves Guillot, Werner Hannapel, Francois Hers, Joseph Koudelka, Suzanne Lafont, Christian Mey nen, Christian Milovanoff, Vincent Mon thiers, Richard Pare, Herve Rabot, Sophie Ristelhueber, Holger Triilzsch.] Animal A [much less than] Trois Cailloux [much greater than] publication. Amiens: Maison de la C… JOSEF KOUDELKA: “Modern Sublime: The World of Josef Koudelka at the Rencontres d’Arles” (2003) … he wanted to compose a book of love poems illustrated with photos), and when you read him, you believe him. Berger has frequently worked with photographs, producing, among other works, four books with the Swiss documentarian Jean Mohr. More important, he has argued that photographs represent an “opposition to history” by affirming the subjective experiences of ordinary people that modernity, science, and industrial capitalism have done so much t… THEORY: “The Treacherous Medium: Why Photography Critics Hate Photographs”  …om the linear into an open-field paradigm. But again it’s not so new; McLuhan wrote about that in 1963. Now he’s being rehabilitated; he was not simply a show-off, but was in fact something of a visionary. Q. With Jean Nouvell you have considered constructing a transparent building using light boxes. Could you start giving us a description of this project, explaining the role of photographs in this project? A. Jean Nouvell is one of t… INTERVIEW: “Lewis Baltz: Subjects and Objects of the New Technological Culture” (1998)  …Me too. Preston: Thanks, Harry and Gilles, for including us. Harry: Students, Gretchen and Preston you are invited to a reception for Gilles tomorrow at the Human Rights Center at 4:00. Preston has the info in my last e-mail. Christian: Bye ^_^ DonJuan: Peace out. Harry: Bye-bye, College Prep, and thank you. DonJuan: Yeah. Rachel: M. Peress, almost all of your photos include people. Are people most interesting to you or were there few interesting… INTERVIEW: “Student Chat with Gilles Peress” (1998)  …hbone chronicles his pleasure-seeking rambles in male after-hours clubs throughout New York City.) Among the arbiters of Victorianism who found this subculture highly offensive, a contrary ideology developed known as Muscular Christianity, seeking a more respectable, and codified athletic male identity. Acceptable behavior and gendered roles were being re-defined and challenged. Although erotic male culture existed among both the upper class and … WALKER EVANS: “Scavenging the Landscape – Walker Evans and American Life” (1996) … to realize how advanced we are as supreme creatures! Wasn’t it that the idea of human supremacy and controls and possessions in the name of justice has always been the essential principle of Western countries and their Christian perspective? What Westerners have believed (liberating human beings from nature through the development of technology and science) became the fundamentals of modernization and our modern life. However, it also trig… JEONGMEE YOON: " Zoo" (1998-1999)  … set aside for wild animals. I am not pro-hunting, and am especially against things like canned hunting. But one cannot deny that in some ways the industry has had a positive effect. Charles Mokwena, a member of the Zionist Christian Church, in his bedroom, 2006 JL: How do these moral ambiguities translate in your photographic approach? How did you plan to capture them photographically? PH: I didn’t have a preconceived notion. I did decid… INTERVIEW: “Pieter Hugo in Conversation with Joanna Lehan” (2007) |