Stieglitz/Equivalents
To come to photography from an intense and often embattled experience of modernism is to feel a peculiar sense of relief. It is like coming in from the cold, like leaving a swamp and gaining high ground. For photography seems to offer a direct, transparent relationship to experience, to the objects of one’s experience. It does not involve us in that sense of deprivation and attack that we feel in much of modernist painting and sculpture. In forcing us to consider our connection to the world only through the mediation of an abstract language, modernism seems to be imposing on us a kind of parsimony, an abstention from the sensuous appetites we had always expected art to satisfy. And it hounds us as well with questions about how we can claim to know what we know, how we can think we see what we see. For a time — long for some, shorter for others — we are deeply engaged with those questions. But then, out of frustration or exhaustion or even mere curiosity, we find ourselves kicking the stone — like Dr. Johnson, indignant at Berkeley’s idealism, pointing to the stone and to his foot and crying, “I refute it thus.” In short, we turn to photography.
#29 contemplation
Content
- ––– Project
- Matej Chrenka
- Matěj Skalický
- ––– Profiles
- Viktoria Binschtok
- Jáchym Myslivec
- Polina Karpova
- Ján Kekeli
- Tereza Kabůrková
- Martin Vongrej
- Clare Strand
- Mary Ellen Bartley
- Zbigniew Dłubak
- James Welling
- Petr Faster
- Jan Hudeček
- Miloš Šejn
- Jan Svoboda
- ––– Discoveries
- Schinster
- Rudolf Skopec
- Hilla Kurki
- ––– Theory
- Stieglitz/Equivalents
- ––– Events
- Paris Photo 2016
- The History of European Photography 1900-2000
- ––– Fotograf Gallery
- Daniel Steegmann Mangrané
- Jiří Poláček
- Rafani
- Václav Stratil
- ––– Reviews
- Libuše Jarcovjáková - Book of Life
- Surrealism and Photography in Czechoslovakia: On the Needles of Days
- Artpress - The Great Interviews series: Photography
- Havel the Human Being
- Baňka's Reflections (and the need for a conflict of interests)
- The Photograph in the Age of Its Technical Reproducibility and Its Outreaches
- Július Koller - One Man Anti Show
- ––– Portfolios
- "The Other Night Sky": Seeing and Counterseeing
Archive
- #45 hypertension
- #44 empathy
- #43 collecting
- #42 food
- #41 postdigital photography
- #40 earthlings
- #39 delight, pain
- #38 death, when you think about it
- #37 uneven ground
- #36 new utopias
- #35 living with humans
- #34 archaeology of euphoria
- #33 investigation
- #32 Non-work
- #31 Body
- #30 Eye In The Sky
- #29 Contemplation
- #28 Cultura / Natura
- #27 Cars
- #26 Documentary Strategies
- #25 Popular Music
- #24 Seeing Is Believing
- #23 Artificial Worlds
- #22 Image and Text
- #21 On Photography
- #20 Public Art
- #19 Film
- #18 80'
- #17 Amateur Photography
- #16 Photography and Painting
- #15 Prague
- #14 Commerce
- #13 Family
- #12 Reconstruction
- #11 Performance
- #10 Eroticon
- #9 Architecture
- #8 Landscape
- #7 New Staged Photography
- #6 The Recycle Image
- #5 Borders Of Documentary
- #4 Intimacy
- #3 Transforming Of Symbol
- #2 Collective Authorship
- #1 Face