"The Printed Picture" traces the changing technology
of picture-making from the Renaissance to the present,
focusing on the vital role of images in multiple copies.
The book surveys printing techniques before the
invention of photography; the photographic processes
that began to appear in the early nineteenth century;
the marriage of printing and photography; and the
rapidly evolving digital inventions of our time. From
woodblocks to chromolithographs, from engravings to bar
codes, from daguerreotypes to contemporary color
photographs, the book succinctly examines the full range
of pictorial processes. Exploring how pictures look by
describing how they are made, author Richard Benson
reaches fascinating and original conclusions about what
pictures can mean. Although many of the techniques he
discusses have been used to create exceptional works of
art, Benson concentrates on the typical, everyday
pictures that have played and continue to play such a
prominent role in our lives. In conjunction with the
publication of the book, an educational installation of
this material will be presented in the photography
galleries at The Museum of Modern Art, New York in the
fall of 2008. Presented as a series of one-page essays
opposite the pictures they examine, the book retains the
lively, engaging style of the informal lectures through
which Benson developed his ideas over the course of 30
years at Yale University. Rooted in hands-on
descriptions of practical techniques, "The Printed
Picture" offers a rich and imaginative interpretation of
the enormous cultural and social influence of multiple
images. Richard Benson is a MacArthur Fellow and the
former Dean of the Yale School of Art. A photographer,
printer and collector, he has devoted a considerable
part of his career to research in photomechanical
reproduction. As a printer Benson was instrumental in
developing the technologies presently used in the
industry to reproduce photographs in ink. He has taught
many workshops and given many lectures on photography,
printing and their associated technologies. He is the
co-author of "Lay This Laurel" (Eakins Press) with
Lincoln Kirstein and "A Maritime Album" (The Mariner's
Museum of Newport News, Virginia) with John Szarkowski.
His photographic work is in the collections of The
Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art
in New York City, The Yale University Art Gallery, New
Haven and many other institutions and private
collections. |
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