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ISBN: HB: 9781606061527

Getty Publications

September 2013

112 pp.

22.5x19.1 cm

75 colour illus., 4 black&white photos

HB:
£18,99
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Architecture in Photographs

This title highlights images of architecture from Greek temples to Gothic cathedrals to modern-day skyscrapers. From the invention of photography in 1839, architecture was second only to portraiture as the most favoured subject for the camera. The fact that buildings were immobile was advantageous for the long exposures needed in the early days, but architectural images were popular for other reasons: they documented dynastic, civic, and religious achievements; educated architects about construction and decorative details; and whetted curiosity about distant lands. Arranged chronologically, this volume spans the history of the medium and includes works in a variety of photographic processes by such distinguished practitioners as Gustave Le Gray, Roger Fenton, Eugene Atget, Walker Evans, Ed Ruscha, Lewis Baltz and Michael Wesely. The seventy-five images presented here form a panoply of architectural structures and styles, from Egyptian ruins to Greek temples and Gothic cathedrals, and from skyscrapers and Modernist schools to mundane vernacular dwellings.

About the Author

Gordon Baldwin is associate curator of photographs at the J. Paul Getty Museum. He is the author of "Looking at Photographs: A Guide to Technical Terms" (Getty and OUP, 1991).

Reviews

"'Architecture in Photography' offers a fascinating commentary on the evolution of the medium and the speed of its growth... Here is the Temple of Dendur on its original site... and the Eiffel Tower under construction. Here are the cobbled streets of great cities as they were before the automobile, and the Flatiron Building as a solitary monolith emerging from nocturnal mists" – FORM: Pioneering Design