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Twilight: Photographs by Gregory Crewdson
Rick Moody
Harry N. Abrams
Harry N. Abrams
"Crewdson is at the forefront of a movement in contemporary photography that has abandoned realism in pursuit of pure cinematic fantasy." The New York Times Magazine Twilight: in that zone between the certainty of day and fear of the...
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Gregory Crewdson
Martin Hochleitner, Urs Stahel
Hatje Cantz Publishers
Hatje Cantz Publishers
Gregory Crewdson's photographic series capture a particularly American state of normalcy--in dissolution. The viewer, at first seduced by what appears to be an idyllic scene, soon discovers subtle off-kilter elements more akin to Film Noir than an...
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Leisure
Bill Owens, Robert Harshorn Shimshak
Fotofolio
Fotofolio
The fourth and final volume in Bill Owens' landmark Suburbia series [SUBURBIA (1973; revised edition 1999, Fotofolio), OUR KIND OF PEOPLE (1975), WORKING - I DO IT FOR THE MONEY (1977), and LEISURE (2004)]. In his introduction to LEISURE,...
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Blur of the Otherworldly: Contemporary Art, Technology, and the Paranormal (Issues in Cultural Theory)
Lynne Tillman, Marina Warner, Spencer Finch, Jeremy Blake
Center for Art and Visual Culture, UMBC
Center for Art and Visual Culture, UMBC
As technology has burgeoned in recent years, so have ghosts in the machine, or so the 29 artists featured here suggest. All use existing gadgets--photography, film, video, radio, Internet, and digital media--to explore age-old questions about...
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Form Follows Fiction
Amy Adler, Takashi Murakami, Tim Noble, Chris Ofili, Sue Webster, Franz Ackermann, Toba Khedoori, Matthieu Laurette, Doug Aitken, Vanessa Beecroft, John Currin, Olafur Eliasson, Cai Guo-Qiang, Kurt Kauper, Margherita Manzelli, Gabriel Orozco, Pipilotti Rist, Ida Gianelli
Charta
Charta
As elements of our life move closer to art, and as art moves directly into life, the differences between the artificial and real are becoming progressively blurred. Form Follows Fiction focuses on a generation of artists who can no longer follow the...
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