“Inanimate Nature” föreläsning på engelska med Geoffrey Batchen.
Little has been published about reproductive daguerreotypes, a genre of photographic still life in which another picture—a drawing, an engraving, a lithograph, a painting, a printed text—is the sole referent. However, as this paper demonstrates, a study of reproductive daguerreotypes is a study of daguerreotypy itself—of its capacities and limitations as a medium, of its major figures and its diversity of commercial applications, of its many possible meanings, functions and related viewing practices. Most significantly, by offering reproduction without multiplicity, these objects also complicate the usual way that reproduction is discussed and call for a different understanding of that process.
Geoffrey Batchen holds the Professorship of the History of Art in the Department of the History of Art and the Faculty of History at the University Oxford. His work as a teacher, writer and curator focuses on the history of photography. His publications include "Burning with Desire: The Conception of Photography" (1997); "Emanations: The Art of the Cameraless Photograph" (2016); "Apparitions: Photography and Dissemination" (2018); and "Negative/Positive: A History of Photography" (2020). His curated exhibitions have been shown at, among other places, the Museu Nacional de Belas Artes in Rio de Janeiro; the New England Regional Art Museum in Armidale, Australia; the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam; the National Media Museum in Bradford, UK; the International Center of Photography in New York
Link to the lecture: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81329712310?pwd=ZXdlQVorbmpGNWJ4Rjg0b05EcXBxUT09
When: Wednesday 14 april at 18.00
Where: On Zoom, the link is posted above
Sign up: The lecture is free of charge and open for everyone, no sign up is needed
Photography at Work
The camera and the photograph are constantly at work, they are working tools that make visible, spread and hide at the same time. The technique does something with our perception and with our way of reading the world. It affects the way we navigate and interact with our surroundings. We have invited four lecturers under the heading "Photography at work". All lectures take place via Zoom. Links will be accessible through this Facebook event or at www.centrumforfotografi.se
Thanks to Konsthall C, Konstfack and Malmö Art Academy.
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