The Window in Photographs

The Window in Photographs by Karen Hellman, published by Getty Publications in October 2013, presents a thematic exploration of the window as a significant motif in photography. This 112-page volume features over eighty color plates from the J. Paul Getty Museum’s permanent collection, showcasing the window’s enduring appeal as both a literal and figurative subject in the photographic medium.
Readers will find a diverse range of works that highlight the window’s role in artistic expression, from early images by pioneers like William Henry Fox Talbot and Julia Margaret Cameron to modern interpretations by contemporary photographers such as Shizuka Yokomizo and Gregory Crewdson. The book examines various stylistic movements and contexts, illustrating how the window has been utilized to explore themes of voyeurism, narrative, and abstraction. Through this collection, the book invites a deeper understanding of the window’s significance in the evolution of photographic vision.
Official synopsis Publisher
Photographers have been irresistibly drawn to the window as a powerful source of inspiration throughout the history of the medium. As one of the first camera subjects, the window is literally and figuratively linked to the photographic process itself. By bringing together key works, arranged thematically rather than chronologically, and presenting pairings within broader stylistic movements, this volume examines the motif of the window as a symbol of photographic vision.
The Window in Photographs includes more than eighty color plates spanning the history of photography, all drawn from the J. Paul Getty Museum’s permanent collection. The theme is presented in a wide range of contexts, from one of the earliest images by William Henry Fox Talbot or Julia Margaret Cameron’s 1864 allegorical use of the motif, to works by members of the Photo-Secession, including Gertrude Käsebier and Fred Holland Day. The documentary thread of the street photographer can be followed in Eugène Atget’s record of the old quartiers of Paris and later twentieth-century photographs by William Eggleston, Walker Evans, and Lee Friedlander. Alfred Stieglitz and Paul Strand chose to utilize the theme of the window for its more graphic possibilities. More recently, photographers Shizuka Yokomizo and Gregory Crewdson explored conceptual aspects of the window to investigate themes of voyeurism and invented narrative, while Uta Barth and Yuki Onodera created more abstract visions.
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