Sunday, 23 April 2023

The mother of all Depression era photos













Right A more detailed book about the photo and how it was used in past years, it also has better reproductions of the seven images Lange took. ISBN 9781633450660

A book for younger readers revealing some background to the Depression years in America and in particular Dorothea Lange's most famous photo that is frequently used as an icon for those times. The author writes about the March 1936 photos that Lange took in a Californian field with several hundred destitute vegetable pickers. She took seven photos, gradually moving closer to a woman and her three daughters who were living in a makeshift tent. The last shot turned out to be the classic. The book says Lange took six photos but I'm looking at seven that are shown in the 'Migrant Mother' book by Sarah Meister (published in 2018 by The Museum of Modern Art ISBN 9781633450660).

Though the book is for younger readers I found the production rather amateurish. Including the cover, the migrant mother photo is shown six times throughout the book's sixty-six pages. Other worthwhile photos from the Library of Congress depression era collection haven't had any treatment to make them sparkle they are bland grey reproductions (and they could all be bigger). The Meister book I mentioned has Lange's photos reproduced with full tonal qualities and printed on lovely matt art paper. Her book also gives lots of background about Lange's photo and how it was used by print media over the past decades. 


Wednesday, 12 April 2023

The graphics of war (4/5)
































 A worthwhile book of 'art' that will interest any graphic artist that does this sort of technical work. I think some of the other reviewers give a misleading impression of the title's content. It certainly isn't a history of the subject but an arbitrary collection of WWII technical illustrations about aircraft from four countries.

Great Britain has the most pages (123) with technical drawings from the RAF Museum in London. An interesting part of these pages is eleven cutaways of the main German warplanes. One of these, the Junkers-JU87 is here and it's also shown as a cutaway in the German pages. The US chapter has two beautiful colored cutaways of the pilot's compartment and armaments of a B-17F. Both of these go beyond the normal technical illustration because they have extensive shading to create a dimensional feel. The Soviet Union has only fourteen pages but it has a good colored renderings of an II-2 Shturmovik cockpit.

The book deals with WWII aviation in the broadest sense, there are the obvious cutaways of planes and engines but also plane recognition charts, the proper handling of equipment when aircraft are on the ground, and several pages in the United Kingdom pages show printed matter relating to abandoning aircraft over land and water.

The book is a pleasant production (printed with a 175 screen on matt art paper) but I was disappointed with the page format. Each spread has an almost an inch-wide colored upright band on the page edge, it serves no purpose and if it wasn't there all the illustrations could have been much larger, so four stars out of five.

Sunday, 2 April 2023

Five star photos in a two star book


























Photography: the whole story. ISBN 978-3791347349

THE PHOTOS

I thought the selection was excellent, from Joseph Niepce 1826 shot to Bryan Smith's 2015 color photo of the Empire State Building. The book's scope is broad, too, with portraits. documentary, news, war, still life, art, photojournalism, fashion, sport, nature in fact any kind of photography that involves some creative input by the photographer rather than photos for the record like first past the post horseracing or police mug shots.

The photos are obviously arranged historically,   pages 20 to 363 have photos before 1945 and 364 to 945 photos up to 2015. The pictures, obviously reflecting the author's selection, had some omissions, in my view. Nothing from Stephen Shore, David Bailey, Diane Arbus, Irving Penn, Helmut Newton or Annie Leibovitz. On the other hand, there are plenty of photographers I've never heard of so their work is a voyage of discovery for me.

THE BOOK

The before you die numbers book is a standard for general publishers: 1000 record covers, 200 places to visit, 1001 books to read et cetera. They all require images but one on photos is different because it's the image that counts. To put 1001 photos, one to a page, in a brick of a book (960 paperback pages, printed with a 175 screen on a matt art paper) doesn't seem the best way to reveal artistic intent. So many of them are not much bigger than postcards or largish thumbnails. To a certain extent, this is because there is too much background copy about the photos.

The book's front pages have an unusual index listing titles, is a reader really going to look for Congo Free State page 154, or Polar panorama page 842? The back pages are more useful with a glossary and photographer index (though regrettably in tiny type).

'1001 photographs' is a sort of history of the subject and a better title could be Juliet Hacking's 'Photography: the whole story' published in 2012 (ISBN 978-3791347349).