What they saw

Russel Lederman, Olga Yatskevich

Historical Photobooks By Women, 1843-1999

10 X 10 Photobooks 2021

Sold out! Non disperarti, puoi prenotarlo!

Unisciti alla lista d'attesa per ricevere un'email se questo libro sarà nuovamente disponibile.

9780578932132
brossura
inglese
nuovo

Spedizioni a Milano città, con pony a 3€
Spedizioni in Italia, in tutta Italia con corriere a 6€ o 7.50€, in base al peso
Spedizione gratuita, sopra i 120€ di acquisto, alla spedizione pensiamo noi!
Spedizioni internazionali, con corriere, in base al paese del destinatario e al peso dell’ordine.
Per maggiori informazioni visita la pagina dedicata.

Se realizzi acquisti sul sito hai diritto di recesso entro 14 giorni dal momento della consegna della merce.
Per maggiori informazioni visita la pagina dedicata.

What They Saw: Historical Photobooks by Women, 1843 – 1999, 10×10 Photobooks’ most recent “book-on-photobooks” anthology in its ongoing examination of photobook history, explores photobooks created by women from photography’s beginnings to the dawn of the 21st century. Presenting a diverse geographic and ethnic selection, the anthology interprets the concept of the photobook in the broadest sense possible: classic bound books, portfolios, personal albums, unpublished books, zines and scrapbooks. Some of the books documented are well-known publications such as Anna Atkins’ Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions (1843-1853), Germaine Krull’s Métal (1928) and Diane Arbus: An Aperture Monograph (1972), while other books may be relatively unknown, such as Alice Seeley Harris’ The Camera and the Congo Crime (c. 1906), Varvara Stepanova’s Groznyi smekh. Okna Rosta (1932), Eslanda Cardozo Goode Robeson’s African Journey (1945), Fina Gómez Revenga’s Fotografías de Fina Gómez Revenga (1954), Eiko Yamazawa’s Far and Near (1962) and Gretta Alegre Sarfaty’s Auto-photos: Série transformações-1976: Diário de Uma Mulher-1977 (1978). Also addressed in the publication are the glaring gaps and omissions in current photobook history-in particular, the lack of access, support and funding for photobooks by non-Western women and women of color.