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Photography Reborn: Image Making in the Digital Era (Abrams Studio) | 
enlarge | Author: Jonathan Lipkin Publisher: "Harry N. Abrams, Inc." Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $15.94 You Save: $9.01 (36%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 205463
Format: Bargain Price Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 128 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 9.9 x 7.8 x 0.3
Dewey Decimal Number: 775 ASIN: B0014JOKD4
Publication Date: November 1, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Not long ago photographers considered digital pictures apostasy-but now film is increasingly being replaced as a great alternative medium for professionals, artists, and everyday snapshooters. Photography Reborn is the first comprehensive survey of this exciting new medium of visual expression-it is an essential reference for anyone who wants to understand this revolution.
In this important companion to a new art form, author Jonathan Lipkin chronicles the rise of digital technology and explores its impact as well as the limits of its possibilities. Every kind of digital image from MRI scans to fine art is highlighted here, from an obscure scientific application, through its adaptation by pioneer computer artists, to its acceptance by the mainstream of the art world. This seminal text-coupled with fascinating images and examples by contemporary artists Andreas Gursky, Thomas Ruff, Pedro Meyer, Nancy Burson, and Loretta Lux-is uniquely appropriate for anyone interested in visual communications, photography, and culture.
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| Customer Reviews:
Nice survey; not so great otherwise January 11, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Having recently read Susan Bright (Art Photography Now) and Charlotte Cotton (The Photograph As Contemporary Art), I can vouch that Lipkin avoids the deliberately opaque writing style his peers employ. And he seems to have some interesting ideas about how artists change with technology.
Unfortunately those ideas are often buried in thematic blubber. Lipkin's chapters are amorphous, no clear idea emerging through. He never fully says what a chapter is and why the photos are tied in. For instance, many of the photos in "The Body Electric" would seem more tied to "Portraiture in the Digital Age", at least going by the names. It would seem that clear sentences and an insightful writer would ensure a good book. Unfortunately, the lack of a decent editor standing over Lipkin's shoulder, telling him to define his ideas, predominates.
Still, you'll be exposed to 30 or so really great artists and some interesting points of view. One of his ideas--that Jennycam represented some major change in image-making and photography--was particularly annoying to me, as the accompanying J-cam images are artless and careless. Photography implies some vision sculpting an individual image; Jennicam was shapeless and random. That said, I appreciate Lipkin's provocation, here and elsewhere.
The book concludes with a tedious and, again, poorly defined history of digital photography (at one point Lipkin says the first digital image was created in 1957; then later says "the earliest digital images ... actually preceded the growth of electronic communication", the phone having been widely known for 50 years earlier). Given a chance to tie his disparate chapters together, Lipkin unwisely skimps on his bread-and-butter (theory) and instead emphasizes mechanical processes.
Persuasive but not very inspiring! October 16, 2007 This book achieves what it sets out to do, but I was disappointed in the author's uncritical enthusiasm. The survey of artists who use digital manipulation to make creative images is not very inspiring. The reproductions are high quality but there is much better work (pictures) out there being published. The text is even less inspiring because the author is so sold on digital imaging that he seems to be selling digital cameras and even sings the praises of cell phone cameras.
I agree that digital images are much easier to make and hence many more images are probably being made now than in the past, but the author doesn't seem to see much value in the sparkling resolution and breathtaking contrast of traditional hand-made prints from film, compared to the relatively flat digital prints the industry is trying to sell people. The author repeats commercial claims about the supposed quality of digital images but such claims have not been confirmed by independent tests.
Instead of technical virtuosity in the medium we are supposed to settle for aesthetic rhetoric about the thought-provoking nature of what are often uninteresting and unrealistic subjects. Digital imaging is certainly cleaner and more convenient than traditional photography, but let's not confuse those qualities with the vividness of a chemically processed transparency or silver or platinum print.
Modern abstract art has been criticized as a more efficient (cheaper) way to mass produce paintings for sale, and digital images can be accused of the same thing. This book is an uncritical look at the digital revolution, and that is not very educational.
A tour-de-force of What Can Be Done January 11, 2006 10 out of 11 found this review helpful
The one thing you can say about digital photography is that it is certainly changing fast. And in this book Mr. Lipkin shows what a series of what you might call photographer/artists have done using digital images and computer manipulation of those images.
In many cases, you might view these images as closer to paintings than photographs. In other cases, the images are of things that we cannot see ourselves, MRI images from inside the skull of a living person, mountains on the surface of Venus. Other images are from somewhere in the mind of the producer. These might be composite pictures of several people, these might be images that start with a photograph but which now are so distorted and colors so changed that their origin is difficult to see.
This is not a book of techniques, it is a book of results, of ideas from the minds of people who are carrying digital photography into new areas.
The Digital Image December 20, 2005 6 out of 8 found this review helpful
It is truly amazing the rate at which technology moves! Four years ago, the author thought that film photography was here to stay for a long while because digital cameras were expensive, not so good, and anyway, people would need fancy computers and printers to make accessible photos. Now easy internet business is routinely conducted with digital images. But, as Lipkin points out, in PHOTOGRAPHY REBORN, it is not only that digital photography takes the place of film. It does, but it also is a genuine new medium. This book tells how and why digital images can outmanipulate experience and reality, be a new aesthetic medium and be more subversive than film photographs in which Trotsky's image was removed from Stalin's. In fact, the book tells not only how digital photography works, but also is a great guide to what it promises to do in the future.
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