PAINTING PHOTOGRAPHY PAINTING
PAINTING PHOTOGRAPHY PAINTING
Painting Photography Painting is the essential first collection of essays by
critic and theorist Carol Armstrong, bringing together writings encompassing the
many inflection points of her academic work, including French painting, early
photography, feminist theory, and the representation of women and gender in the
visual arts. In the book’s titular essay, Armstrong asks of Ellen Gallagher’s
2008 painting An Experiment of Unusual Opportunity, which depicts a
barely-visible sea creature created out of ink, graphite, oil, varnish, and
variously sliced paper, 'in what sense is this a painting exactly?' This inquiry
into the very essence of the medium provides a thread that runs throughout the
book’s wide-ranging essays and ties together a variety of works 'inscribed,
drawn, printed, photographed, and variously pierced and punctured.' Considering
the very essences of these various works on paper, Painting Photography
Painting provides a compelling path through Armstrong's decades of writing,
weaving together figures from across the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
including Helen Frankenthaler, Paul Cézanne, Ellen Gallagher, Georges Seurat,
Julia Margaret Cameron, Tina Modotti, and Diane Arbus in a single, illuminating
volume.
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