Tuesday, December 6, 2011

HELMUT NEWTON EDWARD WESTON ANTON TRCKA HUGE HDCVR BOOK PHOTOGRAPHY NUDES SEXY!!


The Artificial of the Real: Trcka - Weston - Newton (Hardcover)
by Anton Josef Trcka (Author), Edward Weston (Author), Helmut Newton (Author)

HUGE HARDCOVER COFFEE TABLE PHOTOGRAPHIC ART BOOK FEATURING THE WORK OF...

* ANTON JOSEF TRCKA
* EDWARD WESTON
* HELMUT NEWTON

This sumptuous book features the work of three of the greatest photographic artists of this century. It is an interesting grouping of quite different artists, including the soft, atmospheric portraits of Tr cka; the crisp, sensual still lifes of Weston; and the stark nudes of Newton. The book is unified by the theme of photographic form, notably in portraiture and the human figure, as well as Weston's classic still lifes. Although technically a catalog for a 1998 German exhibition curiously titled "The Artificial of the Real," the large-format, clothbound book is beautifully reproduced and reasonably priced, especially given the high production values. Exhibition catalogs often present artists in the freshest and most insightful light, and this book is no exception. It offers a rare opportunity to glimpse the work of three accomplished photographers and to gain some understanding of how their work is viewed today. Highly recommended

* Hardcover: 208 pages
* ISBN-10: 3931141888
* ASIN: B000HWYSB8
* Product Dimensions: 10.7 x 8.8 x 1 inches



Product Description
Nature: In the works of Anton Josef Trcka nature is picturesque, an embellishment atmospherically enhancing his portraits. In Edward Weston's work it appears in its most basic, purest forms, as both reality and its metaphor. And for Helmut Newton nature is the hyper-real backdrop against which he stages the pictorial worlds which accompany and pursue us today. Body: Trcka uses the body as a vehicle for a new expressiveness, a new gesture, a new image of mankind, which at the turn of this century could only be created by means of a photography both so close to, yet so remote from reality. For Weston the body is pure form, one of the world's primordial forms, an abstract representation of human, physical existence. And Newton: here bodies are creations invented by the director behind the camera, manifestly rooted in reality, but nevertheless vigorously detached from it for the sake of art and artificiality. The Artificial of the Real is about the art of perceiving reality and representing it. Three photographers show how human beings have experienced themselves in their world at different moments during this century. For this, photography is how the artificiality of the real is rendered perceptible.