Lecture . Stephen Shore with Melinda Crane
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- Опубліковано 20 чер 2024
- On the occasion of this retrospective a lecture with Stephen Shore was holdat Delphi Filmpalast. In a talk with journalist Melinda Crane, the US-american photographer and artist gave insights into his work, personal experiences and views.
What does it mean to explore the essence of things through photography? Is it possible to show what holds the world together internally-not just its surface appearance? The immaterial is impossible to document directly. Cultural developments and contexts are most clearly manifest in everyday situations, banal objects, unremarkable landscapes, and faceless places. Stephen Shore’s photographic series record, preserve, and reflect on those traces of human life that are normally passed over, considered unworthy of representation.
The exhibition is on view until 22 May 2015. - Фільми й анімація
It's refreshing to hear someone talk intelligently and precisely about photography these days.
Shore's linking on human vision system in 1:00:00 to 1:01:20 to his way of practicing '3D' photography should be celebrated by all photographers. Moreover, in his particular quoting of structural techniques used by master painters in the 17th Century, to organize space, is so encouraging to modern artists, of any medium, to walk into the museums to study the visual heritage that is still available to all of us to draw lessons from on classical structural tools.
I'm 30 seconds in and I'm already in love with this video. Thanks for uploading
1:05:48 in case you want to know what kind of watch to wear to make your pictures look like Shore
I loved this.... Very good!!
yes!
What was the name of the theatre it was in.
It is pleasure
at 45:32 what type of film dis use ?
large format negative. might be kodak
This is tripe, there is nothing precocious about some kid whom was given a fast track to pursue his intrests when someone (whom is also probably questionable about his artistic talents) famous gives him the "OK".
Wow, it's like the ghost of an aging art critic from the 70s rose up to gasp out one more uneducated dismissal.