GARY
SCHNEIDER: PORTRAITS
Gary Schneider
Essay
by Deborah Martin Kao
Softbound, 136 pages, 10.10" x 8.62"
2004, Yale University Press
From the Publisher
This book accompanies an exhibition at the Harvard University
Art Museums (Feb. 28 to June 13, 2004) and The Contemporary Museum,
Honolulu (Aug.13 to Oct. 10, 2004); Published in association with
Harvard University Art Museums
About
the Author
Deborah Martin Kao is the Richard L. Menschel Curator of Photography
at the Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University, and senior lecturer
in Harvard University's department of the history of art and architecture.
She is co-author of the award-winning Ben Shahn's New York, published
by Yale University Press.
Book
Description
Considered one of the most thought-provoking photographers practicing
today, South African-born Gary Schneider creates unique luminescent
portraits that transform their specific subject matter and probe
the enigmatic character of identity. This remarkable book is the
first to examine Schneider's innovative portrait work. Deborah
Martin Kao discusses Schneider's re-presentation of nineteenth-century
studio portraits, his handprint photograms, and his fragmented
face portraits-all of which reveal as much about the language
of photography as they do about the subjects being depicted. She
shows how Schneider portrays the collaboration between artist
and subject, seen in his use of a light pen to sculpt or trace
his subjects over long exposures, and in his prints that display
traces of movement in time. Kao also discusses Schneider's work
with scientists to create negatives from which he makes strikingly
beautiful images of blood, DNA, and strands of hair, and how these
represent a fascinating evolution in traditional thinking about
the nature of photographic portraiture. Gary Schneider: Portraits
also features an interview with Schneider that provides insight
into the life and working methods of an extraordinary contemporary
photographer.
Book
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