Search results for ""Author Quentin Bajac""
Schirmer /Mosel Verlag Gm Die groe Geschichte der zeitgenssischen Photographie Von 1960 bis heute
£20.00
Museum of Modern Art The Shape of Things: Photographs from Robert B. Menschel
£31.50
Thames & Hudson Ltd Stephen Shore: Solving Pictures
One of the most significant photographers of our time, Stephen Shore has often been considered alongside other artists who rose to prominence in the 1970s by capturing the mundane aspects of American popular culture in straightforward, unglamorous images. But Shore has worked with many forms of photography, switching from cheap automatic cameras to large-format cameras in the 1970s, pioneering the use of colour before returning to black and white in the 1990s, and in the 2000s taking up the opportunities of digital photography, digital printing and social media. Stephen Shore encompasses the entirety of the artist’s work of the last five decades, during which he has conducted a continual, restless interrogation of image making, from the gelatin silver prints he made as a teenager to his current engagement with digital platforms. Published to accompany the major exhibition at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, the book allows for a fuller understanding of Shore’s work, and demonstrates his singular vision – defined by an interest in daily life, a taste for serial and often systematic approaches, a strong intellectual underpinning, a restrained style, sly humour and visual casualness – and uncompromising pursuit of photography’s possibilities.
£54.00
Twin Palms Publishers Lise Sarfati: She
"A family album preserves only carefully selected photographs. Out of an entire life, it stores only handpicked moments, privileging special occasions, displaying only happy moments. It tends to underline a group’s social links, to highlight a shared life. None of this figures in She: instead of a chronology, time is stopped. There is no group photo or desire to stage a collective destiny, only isolated models and individuals who do not seem to communicate amongst themselves; no happy moments or picturesque places, only indifferent moments in ordinary places. The models pose, but reservedly, often without looking into the camera. And even when we do see their faces, we don’t really seem to see them. When we close the book and think a bit about it, we cannot but see She as the anti-family album par excellence." —Quentin Bajac, Chief Curator of Photography at the Museum of Modern Art
£67.50
Museum of Modern Art Photography at MoMA: 1840-1920
£49.50
Museum of Modern Art Wolfgang Tillmans: To look without fear
£49.50
Museum of Modern Art Oasis in the City: The Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden at The Museum of Modern Art
£112.50