Andy Warhol's Serial Photography (Contemporary Artists and their Critics)
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Word Count
51,500 words, Guess
Page Count
206 pages
Physical Format
Hardcover
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL7765116M
- ISBN-139780521823357
- ISBN-100521823358
- OCLC Control Number53006959
- Library of Congress Control Number2003055908
and 2 more
- Goodreads495785
- LibraryThing9055998
Classifications
- LCCTR655 .G35 2004
Description
"From 1982 to 1987, Andy Warhol made hundreds of works composed of black-and-white photographic prints stitched together with thread. These works are indebted to his earlier repetitive silkscreen paintings and are also the result of lifelong photographic exploration and a prolific decade in which the artist shot more than 124,000 frames. This book is the first scholarly monograph to interpret Warhol's enigmatic photographic series. Contextualizing them within the history of photography and the art world of the 1980s, William Ganis demonstrates how Warhol manipulates the tenets of modern art photography to create ambiguity in the perception of the images. Subverting the objectivity of photography by making viewers aware of photographic mediation through multiples of images, Warhol paradoxically made unique objects in his many photographic series. They also form part of Warhol's media machinations, through which Warhol conflated and complicated painting, printmaking, drawing, and photography."--Jacket.
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