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Color rush : seventy-five years of color photography in America / by Lisa Hostetler, Katherine Bussard.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York : Aperture ; London : Thames & Hudson [distributor], 2013.Description: 275p. 29cmISBN:
  • 9781597112260 (hbk.)
  • 1597112267 (hbk.)
Other title:
  • Colour Rush : American color photography from Stieglitz to Sherman
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 779 AME
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Standard Loan LSAD Library Main Collection 779 AME (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 39002100560425

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Today color photography is so ubiquitous that it's hard to believe there was a time when this was not the case. Color Rush: Seventy-five Years of Color Photography in America explores the developments that led us to this point, looking at the way color photographs circulated and appeared at the time of their making. From magazine pages to gallery walls, from advertisements to photojournalism, Color Rush charts the history of color photography in the United States from the moment it became available as a mass medium to the moment when it no longer seemed an unusual choice for artists. The book begins with the 1907 unveiling of autochrome, the first commercially available color process, and continues up through the 1981 landmark survey show and book, The New Color Photography, which hailed the widespread acceptance of color photography in contemporary art. In the intervening years, color photography captured the popular imagination through its visibility in magazines like Life and Vogue, as well as through its accessibility in the marketplace thanks to companies like Kodak. Often in photo histories color is presented as having arrived fully formed in the 1970s; this book reveals a deeper story and uncovers connections in both artistic and commercial practices. A comprehensive chronology and examples of significant moments and movements mark the increasing visibility of color photography. Color Rush brings together Ansel Adams and William Eggleston, Eliot Porter and Cindy Sherman, Edward Steichen and Stephen Shore, and examines them in a fresh context paying particular attention to color photography's translation onto the printed page. In doing so, it traces a new history that more fully accounts for color's pervasive presence today.

Katherine Bussard covers the history and Lisa Hostetler looks at the nature of color work in essays. Both writers cover it all: early color; Hollywood; newspapers; Kodak; advertising; magazines (National Geographic, Life and Vogue) and many individual photographers. The acceptance of color as art took some time as Hostetler says on page twenty-one: \'Thus in the documentary era -- the 1930s and early \'40s -- monochrome photograph\'s association was with reality and truth, while color photography was usually associated with superfluous fantasy and commercial extravagance\'.Color Rush brings together Ansel Adams... William Eggleston... Eliot Porter...Cindy Sherman...Edward Steichen...Stephen Shore, and many more.

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