Five winters long, the young American photographer Lisa M. Robinson took pictures in the snow. Snowbound shows landscapes in which everyday objects - alienated and sunken in snow - "civilize" the natural surroundings. Traces of human existence set accents in the white landscape, delimiting it and often popping up in an amusing or incongruous way. A lonely hammock, a trampoline, and a swimming pool are echoes of the summer past and of personal memories. But Robinson is not interested in showing the obvious; instead, she makes use of the many aggregate states of water - ice, snow, fog, and water - as metaphors for life and transience.
This is a comprehensive monograph charting the career of the acclaimed American photographer.
Leben in München: Fotos aus den frühen 60er-Jahren
The book showcases 128 color and black-and-white photographs made over more than fifty years of pilgrimages across Americafrom the Great Smoky Mountains of Tennessee to Thomas Bay, Alaska, and from Acadia National Park in Maine to Joshua ...
Photographs by David H Gibson
Historical Marker: Along the Lewis and Clark Trail
John Davies - Seine Valley: landscapes of the River Seine and surrounding areas, including Le Havre, Rouen, Les Andelys and...
With poetic comments by the artist on all the pictures, the book is both a portrait of the world as encountered by the photographer and a portrait of the photographer as reflected in his vision of the world.
The first book to juxtapose bodies of work by these two twentieth-century master photographers, Reinventing the West reveals how their photographs reflect changing attitudes toward the western landscape and the natural world.
John Mills: Photographs of New York State and Landscapes of the Rochester Countryside
Wilted Country collects the best of Eberhard’s images in a single volume and complements them with critical essays on the artist’s craft by Anthony Bannon, the director of the George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and ...