CAPITOLIO
Christopher Anderson
Hardbound,
13" x 11½", 132
pages
75 black & white and 10 color illustrations
2009, RM
From the Publisher:
Capitolio is NewYork documentary photographer Christopher
Anderson’s cinematic journey through the upheavals of contemporary
Caracas,Venezuela, in the tradition of such earlier projects as
William Klein’s New York (1954–55) and Robert
Frank’s The Americans (1958). It presents a poetic
and politicized vision, by one of today’s finest documentary
photographers, of a city and a country that is ripping apart at
the seams under the stress of popular unrest, and whose turmoil
remains largely unreported byWestern media. No stranger to such
fraught situations (he covered the 2006 conflict between Hezbollah
and Israel from its inception), Anderson notates the country’s
current incongruities, where the violent and the sensual intermingle
chaotically.“The word ‘capitolio’ refers to
the domed building that houses a government,” writes Anderson,
elaborating on the title of this volume; “here, the city
of Caracas, Venezuela, is itself a metaphorical capitolio building.
The decaying Modernist architecture,with a jungle growing through
the cracks, becomes the walls of this building and the violent
streets become the corridors where the human drama plays itself
out in what President Hugo Chavez called a ‘revolution.’”
|