Hylla FOTOGRAFI - Inz Smolarz, Elisabeth
Personnamn
Titel och upphov Elisabeth Smolarz : encyclopedia of things
Utgivning, distribution etc. Spector Books, Leipzig : [2022]
Utgivningsår
DDC klassifikationskod (Dewey Decimal Classification)
SAB klassifikationskod
Fysisk beskrivning 238 pages color photographs 29 cm
Anmärkning: Innehållsbeskrivning, sammanfattning Whether a keepsake, memento, or heirloom, everyone has their own talismans: objects with a value that is only of significance to their owner. The meaning of such objects gets assigned silently, internally, often without any words being articulated, and yet when we explain their importance, it reveals so much about who we are. Elisabeth Smolarz approaches these objects as elements in a social and anthropological process. She visited 200 people in North America, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia and spent an afternoon with them talking about the objects they had selected. In dialogue with these collaborators she then developed an installation of the individual objects - an arrangement that ultimately produces a portrait of the person. The photographic still lifes are accompanied by short texts by a range of writers who share their responses to these portraits. Elisabeth Smolarz is an artist, curator, and educator living and working in Queens. She is the founder/director of Spectral Lines.
Personnamn
Term
ISBN
Antal i kö:
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*00520230213141113.0
*008230213s2022 gw a||||||||||000 0|eng|d
*020 $a9783959055109
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*035 $a(OCoLC)on1293294392
*035 $a(SE-LIBR)5mqjcpbt3jrcqr7d
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*084 $aPn$2kssb/8 (machine generated)
*1001 $aSmolarz, Elisabeth
*24510$aElisabeth Smolarz :$bencyclopedia of things /$cElisabeth Smolarz ; editor, Michelle Levy.
*264 1$aLeipzig :$bSpector Books,$c[2022]
*300 $a238 pages$bcolor photographs$c29 cm
*336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
*336 $astill image$bsti$2rdacontent
*337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
*338 $avolume$bnc$2rdacarrier
*5208 $aWhether a keepsake, memento, or heirloom, everyone has their own talismans: objects with a value that is only of significance to their owner. The meaning of such objects gets assigned silently, internally, often without any words being articulated, and yet when we explain their importance, it reveals so much about who we are. Elisabeth Smolarz approaches these objects as elements in a social and anthropological process. She visited 200 people in North America, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia and spent an afternoon with them talking about the objects they had selected. In dialogue with these collaborators she then developed an installation of the individual objects - an arrangement that ultimately produces a portrait of the person. The photographic still lifes are accompanied by short texts by a range of writers who share their responses to these portraits. Elisabeth Smolarz is an artist, curator, and educator living and working in Queens. She is the founder/director of Spectral Lines.
*60010$aSmolarz, Elisabeth
*650 0$aPhotograhy, artistic
*650 0$aStill-life photography.
*650 0$aStaged photography.
*650 0$aStill-life photography$vSocial aspects.
*7001 $aLevy, Michelle
*852 $5Ko$bKo$cFOTOGRAFI -$hInz Smolarz, Elisabeth
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*887 $5Ko$a{"@id":"p582w83zm0566zbl","modified":"2023-02-13T14:11:45.967+01:00"}$2librisxl
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An artist's anthropology of everyday talismanic objects
Whether a keepsake, memento or heirloom, everyone has their own talismans: objects with a value that is only of significance to their owner. The meaning of such objects gets assigned silently, internally, often without any words being articulated, and yet when we explain their importance, it reveals much about who we are. Queens-based artist, curator and educator Elisabeth Smolarz (born 1976) approaches these objects as elements in a social and anthropological process. She visited 200 people in North America, Europe, the Middle East and Asia, and spent an afternoon with them talking about the objects they had selected. In dialogue with these collaborators, she then developed an installation of the individual objects--an arrangement that ultimately produces a portrait of the person. The photographic still lifes are accompanied by short texts by a range of writers who share their responses to these portraits.