A Matter of Memory: Photography as Object in the Digital Age
With the convenience and ubiquity of computers and smartphones, the majority of photographic images are being recorded digitally rather than on film. As this transformation has broadened access to photographic images鈥攂oth in making and in viewing鈥攊n many contexts it has also obviated the need for photographic prints. Snapshooters, photojournalists, and commercial photographers rarely produce material objects as the final step in their process. As a consequence, photographs in the form of image-bearing sheets of paper are scarce outside of the art world.
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With the convenience and ubiquity of computers and smartphones, the majority of photographic images are being recorded digitally rather than on film. As this transformation has broadened access to photographic images鈥攂oth in making and in viewing鈥攊n many contexts it has also obviated the need for photographic prints. Snapshooters, photojournalists, and commercial photographers rarely produce material objects as the final step in their process. As a consequence, photographs in the form of image-bearing sheets of paper are scarce outside of the art world.
Artists on show
- Adam Fuss
- Alison Rossiter
- Antony Cairns
- Augusta Wood
- Bertien van Manen
- Bryan Graf
- Chris Marshall
- Chris McCaw
- Diane Meyer
- Ellen Carey
- Farrah Karapetian
- James Welling
- Jason Lazarus
- Jim Lommasson
- John Chang
- John Chiara
- Kenneth Josephson
- Kunié Sugiura
- Laura Letinsky
- Leslie Hewitt
- Lilly Lulay
- Marco Breuer
- Marlo Pascual
- Matthew Brandt
- Matthew Porter
- Matthew Swarts
- Melanie Willhide
- Michelle Stuart
- Mladen Bizumic
- Phil Chang
- Robert Heinecken
- Taryn Simon
- Thomas Barrow
- Vik Muniz
- Yola Monakhov Stockton
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