PRESUMED
INNOCENCE
Photographic
Perspective of Children
Hardbound,
9" x 12",
160 pages
51 color and 63 tritone
illustrations
2008, DeCordova Museum
Edited by Kate Dempsey
Text by Rachel Rosenfield Lafo, Anne Higonnet
From the Publisher:
From Ansel Adams' harrowing 1940s documentary
photographs of transient migrant workers' children to Sally Mann's
simultaneously erotic and innocent portraits of her adolescent
children and other pre- and postpubescent girls, images of children
have fascinated and frustrated viewers since the inception of
the medium. This excellent collection of vintage and contemporary
photographs, spanning from the early twentieth century until now,
covers all of the relevant genres, from documentary reportage
to digitally manipulated constructions. It includes well-known
black-and-white images by renowned masters, as well as very recent
color work by American and European photographers alike.
Among the 85 photographers included
are Ansel Adams, Diane Arbus, Julie Blackmon, Manual Alvarez Bravo,
Henri Cartier-Bresson, Bruce Davidson, Rineke Dijkstra, Elliot
Erwitt, Lalla Essaydi, Larry Fink, Robert Frank, Emmet Gowin,
Pieter Hugo, Dorothea Lange, Gillian Laub, Helen Levitt, Sally
Mann, Mary Ellen Mark, Tina Modotti, Abelardo Morell, Martin Parr
and Doris Ulmann. Scholarly essays by Rachel Rosenfield Lafo of
the DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park and Barnard College's
Anne Higonnet discuss the history of photography and changing
concepts of childhood in visual imagery, respectively.
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