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Poetics Of Light: Contemporary Pinhole Photography

Poetics Of Light: Contemporary Pinhole Photography

Eric Renner & Nancy Spencer

Hardcover | 29.21 x 2.29 x 24.13 cm | 212 pp

Museum of New Mexico | 2014 | 9780890135884

Three decades ago Eric Renner resuscitated the form with his publication Pinhole Journal that ushered in a resurgence of interest by artists seeking an alternative, often conceptual, vision and alternative to sharp-focus photography. Renner and Nancy Spencer have built a collection of pinhole art from 31 countries and 500 of artists comprising 6000 images.

Pinhole offers new ways of exploring the world using the simplest, improvised mechanisms fashioned of oat boxes, sea shells, and other surprising materials to create images of mysterious, sometimes disturbing beauty in dreamlike landscapes, portraits still-lifes, abstractions and politically charged images. In pinhole it is the camera object that looks but the artist that sees, thus accounting for the considerable mystery and poetry that is pinhole photography. Primitive in technological terms, it allows us to visualise things we cannot see. A photograph made with the pinhole camera is always a recording of the cameras gaze, showing what it looked at, not what the human being saw. The photographer no longer constructs subjective representations; he merely assists at the birth of the image.

$16.58

Original: $47.37

-65%
Poetics Of Light: Contemporary Pinhole Photography

$47.37

$16.58
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Description

Eric Renner & Nancy Spencer

Hardcover | 29.21 x 2.29 x 24.13 cm | 212 pp

Museum of New Mexico | 2014 | 9780890135884

Three decades ago Eric Renner resuscitated the form with his publication Pinhole Journal that ushered in a resurgence of interest by artists seeking an alternative, often conceptual, vision and alternative to sharp-focus photography. Renner and Nancy Spencer have built a collection of pinhole art from 31 countries and 500 of artists comprising 6000 images.

Pinhole offers new ways of exploring the world using the simplest, improvised mechanisms fashioned of oat boxes, sea shells, and other surprising materials to create images of mysterious, sometimes disturbing beauty in dreamlike landscapes, portraits still-lifes, abstractions and politically charged images. In pinhole it is the camera object that looks but the artist that sees, thus accounting for the considerable mystery and poetry that is pinhole photography. Primitive in technological terms, it allows us to visualise things we cannot see. A photograph made with the pinhole camera is always a recording of the cameras gaze, showing what it looked at, not what the human being saw. The photographer no longer constructs subjective representations; he merely assists at the birth of the image.