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A World Common: Contemporary African Photography
Barnes and Noble
A World Common: Contemporary African Photography
Current price: $60.00
Barnes and Noble
A World Common: Contemporary African Photography
Current price: $60.00
Size: Hardcover
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A World in Common
is a celebration of the visual and cultural landscape of contemporary African photography. Edited by Osei Bonsu, curator of International Art at Tate Modern, this stunning exhibition book offers critical insight from the perspectives of Africa’s leading artists and thinkers.
Since the invention of photography in the 19th century, Africa has been defined largely by Western images of its cultures and traditions. From the colonial
carte de visite
and ethnographic archive to the rise of studio portraiture and social documents of racial surveillance, the fraught relationship between Africa and the photographic lens has become inseparable from the discourses of postcolonialism.
Challenging these dominant images of exoticism and otherness, this book illustrates how photography has allowed artists to reimagine African histories through the lens of the present, to shape our understanding of the contemporary realities we face.
Bringing together a diverse range of artists and thinkers to present varied perspectives on issues such as cultural heritage and restitution, spirituality, urbanism, and climate change,
reveals how innovative contemporary photography challenges perceptions of history, culture, and identity.
is a celebration of the visual and cultural landscape of contemporary African photography. Edited by Osei Bonsu, curator of International Art at Tate Modern, this stunning exhibition book offers critical insight from the perspectives of Africa’s leading artists and thinkers.
Since the invention of photography in the 19th century, Africa has been defined largely by Western images of its cultures and traditions. From the colonial
carte de visite
and ethnographic archive to the rise of studio portraiture and social documents of racial surveillance, the fraught relationship between Africa and the photographic lens has become inseparable from the discourses of postcolonialism.
Challenging these dominant images of exoticism and otherness, this book illustrates how photography has allowed artists to reimagine African histories through the lens of the present, to shape our understanding of the contemporary realities we face.
Bringing together a diverse range of artists and thinkers to present varied perspectives on issues such as cultural heritage and restitution, spirituality, urbanism, and climate change,
reveals how innovative contemporary photography challenges perceptions of history, culture, and identity.