EXPOSED
Voyeurism, Surveillance,
and the Camera Since 1870
Sandra S. Phillips
Hardbound,
9½" x 11¾",
256
pages
200 color illustrations
2010, Yale University Press
Contributions from Simon Baker, Phillip Brookman, Marta Gili,
Carol Squires, and Rachel B. Woodward
From the Publisher:
Since the rise of the photographic medium
in the late 19th century, people have been fascinated by the camera’s
ability to record striking moments both public and private. From
Matthew Brady’s haunting images of the Civil War to the
present day paparazzi’s brand of voyeurism-for-hire, photography
has long served to capture not only the posed portrait but also
the personal, the intimate, the unexpected, and the taboo. This
fascinating book examines the ways in which acts of voyeurism
and surveillance have inspired, challenged, and expanded the medium
of photography throughout its evolution.
Featuring photography by Sophie Calle, Henri Cartier-Bresson,
Walker Evans, Harun Farocki, Nan Goldin, Robert Mapplethorpe,
Helmut Newton, Andy Warhol, and Weegee, among others, Exposed
chronicles the artistic, political, and even moral dilemmas that
underlie some of these artists’ best known works. Through
insightful essays and commentary by Sandra Phillips, one of the
foremost authorities on the history of 20th-century photography,
Exposed examines some of the most invasive and unsettling
aspects of photography, including the use of the hidden camera,
the production of erotic pictures and pornography, and the intersection
of photography with both celebrity and violence. |