À propos du livre
In his timely essay, Richard Steven Street discusses minick’s images in the context of the history of farmworker photography and recounts what it is like for an impoverished mexican or guatemalan to leave everything be- hind and walk, hitch, ride rails, to find work in “el norte.” He describes men who will work ten-hour days, six to seven days a week, for months, years, at labor that is back-breaking, underpaid, unappreciated. These are “liminal men,” writes Street, men caught between two worlds––the one they have left behind and the one in which they have found themselves attempting to survive.
Caractéristiques et détails
- Catégorie principale: Livres d'art et de photographie
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Format choisi: Grand carré, 30×30 cm
# de pages: 114 - Date de publication: févr 09, 2016
- Langue English
- Mots-clés Documentary Photography, Black & White Photography, Farmworker Photography, Fine Art Photography
À propos du créateur
American Roger Minick has been photographing the American experience for nearly half a century. His photographs are included in permanent collections at the Museum of Modern Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the J Paul Getty Museum, George Eastman House, Smithsonian, and numerous private collections. Two previous mainstream photographic books, published by Scrimshaw Press, include DELTA WEST and HILLS OF HOME. Recent books include AMERICAN BIOGRAPHICS, SIGHTSEER, PERAMBULATIONS, UNDOCUMENTED, THE ETERNAL STARE, EyeEurope, EyeRamblings, DELTA, OZARKS, FIFTY, WHAT IN THE WORLD, MonoChrome, SEASCAPES, VARIOUS & SUNDRY, SOUTHLAND, LIPS, ESPEJO, SEA DIALOGUES, PEN & INK TO PAPER, PORTRAITS, PANORAMA, and THE BANDING SEA, all published by Perambulation Press, a self-publishing venture founded by Roger Minick, specializing in fine art limited edition books. Dylan Swift is Roger Minick's nom de plume.