Wednesday, 20 February 2013

Studio Spaces~Blue Sympathetically : Historical Spatial Frames/Registers

Blue Sympathetically : Engaging with the unknowable at the heart~midst of experience.
Studio Spaces : Historical Spatial Frames/Registers.


Alternative Photography
Documents from research archive

Tracing Light : Petworth House, West Sussex 2000
David Alan Mellor, Garry Fabian Miller.

Light And The Genius Loci
For Derrida, the sun not only marks the beginning of metaphoricity but it is also an inescapable reminder of the solar system and oscillations, hidings and occultrations, inherent in 'a certain history of the relationships; earth/sun inthe system of perception'.

Mutations Of Light
Petworth Window, 6 July 1999

Light's Windows And Rooms
Passing towards the Invisible.
The prospect of some metaphysical realm beyond the blue end of the spectrum and beyond material things illuminated to carnal sight, was a recurrent  theme in William Henry Fox Talbot's early speculations.

CATCHING THE LIGHT
The entangled history of light and mind
Arthur Zajonc

BROUGHT TO LIGHT
PHOTOGRAPHY AND THE INVISIBLE 1840-1900

Sight Unseen
Picturing The Universe
Corey Keller
Invisible objects, penciled by nature's own hand.
In his introduction to the exhibition catalogue Iconoclash: Beyond the Image Wars in Science, Religion, and Art, the historian of science Bruno Latour argues that scientific pictures are powerfully affective because they more than mere images; they are, as he puts it, the 'world itself'.

The Social
Photographic Eye
Jennifer Tucker
Nineteenth century science was characterized by both the appeal to visual evidence and the need for confirmation by the testimony of eyewitnesses. The latter explains why scientists pursued public viewings of their photographs by means of illustrated slide lectures, exhibitions, and reproduction in newspapers and magazines.
An understanding of the social boundaries of nineteenth century science helps make sense of a certain paradox within contemporary attitudes towards photography of the invisible. The ideal of mechanical objectivity in documenting visual knowledge demanded the elimination of the artist-observer and all of the subjectivity implicit in drawing by hand. 

Invisible Worlds
Visible Media
Tom Gunning
William Henry Fox Talbot, Slice of horse chestnut, seen through the solar microscope, 1840, salt print 18.6x22.5 cm.

Techniques Of The Observer
On Vision And Modernity In The Nineteenth Century
Jonathan Crary
The Camera Obscura and its Subject
Above all it indicates the appearance of a new model of subjectivity, the hegemony of a new subject-effect. First of all the camera obscura performs an operation of individuation; that is, it necessarily defines an observer as isolated, enclosed, and autonomous within its dark confines. It impels a kind of askesis, or withdrawal from the world, in order to regulate and purify one's relation to the manifold contents of the now 'exterior' world. 

UNDER THE SUN
By The Light Of The Fertile Observer
Metaphors of illumination in the photography of Christopher Bucklow, Susan Derges, Garry Fabian Miller, and Adam Fuss.
An Epiphany Of Light
David Alan Mellor

Christopher Bucklow , Guests
Jeanette Winterson, Gut Symmetries
Matter is provisional and that includes me. If the physics is correct then we are neither alive or dead as we commonly understand it, but in different states of potentiality.

From The Adamantine Land
Variations on the art of Christopher Bucklow
David Alan Mellor

Etienne-Jules Marey
A Passion For The Trace
Francois Dagognet

Painting, Photography, Film
Laszlo Moholy-Nagy
A Bauhaus Book

L. MOHOLY-NAGY:
DYNAMIC OF THE METROPOLIS
SKETCH FOR A FILM
ALSO TYPOPHOTO

OSKAR SCHLEMMER
MAN

Interaction of Color
Josef Albers

The Elements of Color
 Johannes Itten

Pedagogical Sketchbook
Paul Klee

The New Landscape in art and science
Gyorgy Kepes

The Colour  of Time
Garry Fabian Miller
The Majesty of Darkness
Adam Nicolson
The Unmade
The Pregnant
The Half Erotically Unmade

Camera Obscura of Ideology
Sarah Kofman
An optical instrument, which used in drawing, allows one to see at the same time the objects being drawn and the paper.

I Am Not This Body
Barbara Ess

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