Knihobot

Více o knize

For roughly a decade, from 1992 to 2002, Joachim Brohm undertook a photographic project of long-term urban observation. At the same location on the outskirts of a German city, he took hundreds of pictures of redevelopment, recording the place as it was transformed from a 1950s commercial/industrial district into a gentrified post-industrial services center and living area. In a meditative response to these changes, Brohm cartographically captured the premises, their buildings and materials, and chronologically documented the developments during this period. Brohm's pictorial idiom--characterized by a dissolved center, with layering and composition referencing the continuation of space beyond the frame's limits--is both documentary and deconstructive. His photographs simultaneously depict and dissolve the outside world, lending the transitory, hovering state of reality and meaning a powerful pictorial form.

Nákup knihy

Joachim Brohm, Regina Bittner, Joachim Brohm, Oliver Kossack, Urs Stahel

Jazyk
Rok vydání
2003
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(pevná)
Jakmile se objeví, pošleme e-mail.

Doručení

Platební metody

Nikdo zatím neohodnotil.Ohodnotit

Titul
Joachim Brohm
Podtitul
Areal
Jazyk
anglicky
Vydavatel
Steidl
Rok vydání
2003
Vazba
pevná
Počet stran
264
ISBN10
3882438789
ISBN13
9783882438789
Série
Anotace
For roughly a decade, from 1992 to 2002, Joachim Brohm undertook a photographic project of long-term urban observation. At the same location on the outskirts of a German city, he took hundreds of pictures of redevelopment, recording the place as it was transformed from a 1950s commercial/industrial district into a gentrified post-industrial services center and living area. In a meditative response to these changes, Brohm cartographically captured the premises, their buildings and materials, and chronologically documented the developments during this period. Brohm's pictorial idiom--characterized by a dissolved center, with layering and composition referencing the continuation of space beyond the frame's limits--is both documentary and deconstructive. His photographs simultaneously depict and dissolve the outside world, lending the transitory, hovering state of reality and meaning a powerful pictorial form.