Results for 'Images, Photographic'

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  1.  4
    Images: Photographs, 2014–2016.Michael Ashkin - 2017 - Diacritics 45 (4).
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  2.  49
    Transforming images: Photographs of representations.Barbara E. Savedoff - 1992 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 50 (2):93-106.
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  3. Digital Imaging, Photographic Representation and Aesthetics.Jonathan Friday - 1997 - Ends and Means 2 (2).
     
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  4. Photographic Registers Are Latent Images.Mark Windsor - 2023 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 81 (3):404-407.
    In a recent article, Dawn Wilson (2021) has argued against single-stage accounts of photography by arguing against the latent photographic images upon which those accounts depend. Concomitantly, she argues that the only viable account of photography is multi-stage. Unlike single-stage accounts, multi-stage accounts do not postulate the existence of photographic images of any kind prior to development. Rather, according to multi-stage accounts, photographs are produced from “photographic registers.” In this Discussion Piece, I defend single-stage accounts by arguing (...)
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  5.  57
    Images in Spite of All: Four Photographs From Auschwitz.Georges Didi-Huberman - 2008 - University of Chicago Press.
    Images in Spite of All reveals that these rare photos of Auschwitz, taken clandestinely by one of the Jewish prisoners forced to help carry out the atrocities there, were made as a potent act of resistance.
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  6.  31
    Some Photographic Images Are Transparent.Won-Leep Moon - 2018 - Aisthesis. Pratiche, Linguaggi E Saperi Dell’Estetico 11 (2):23-33.
    Kendall Walton argued that photographs are transparent, that we literally see things through them. This claim provoked many objections, and one line of argument has focused on the fact that when we see objects in ordinary situations we see their approximate location with respect to us, whereas in typical photographs we do not. The author argues, however, that this egocentric spatial information is not what distinguishes literal seeing from typical photograph seeing. Instead of it, the author proposes two conditions for (...)
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  7.  5
    Photographing Families: Tips for Capturing Timeless Images.Michele Celentano - 2013 - Wiley.
    Create family portraits to cherish for a lifetime Family photographs are a staple of both amateur and professionalphotography. While always in demand, they also pose a unique set ofchallenges. In this book, Canon Explorer of Light Michele Celentanoguides beginning- to intermediate-level photographers around thecommon pitfalls and helps them learn how to get top-quality shotsevery time. From getting families organized and directing theposing to managing large groups and impatient kids, this bookreveals the secrets and helps you capture the shot without relyingon (...)
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  8.  7
    Images and Enterprise: Technology and the American Photographic Industry, 1839 to 1925. Reese V. Jenkins.Stanley L. Becker - 1977 - Isis 68 (2):334-335.
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  9.  36
    Photographs, symbolic images, and the holocaust: On the (im)possibility of depicting historical truth.Judith Keilbach - 2009 - History and Theory 48 (2):54-76.
    Photography has often been scrutinized regarding its relationship to reality or historical truth. This includes not only the indexicality of photography, but also the question of how structures and processes that comprise history and historical events can be depicted. In this context, the Holocaust provides a particular challenge to photography. As has been discussed in numerous publications, this historic event marks the “limits of representation.” Nevertheless there are many photographs “showing” the Holocaust that have been produced in different contexts that (...)
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  10. The photographic image, a study of political-culture.Pertti Ahonen - 1991 - Semiotica 87 (3-4):225-238.
     
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  11.  27
    Imaging Extinction: Disclosure and Revision in Photographs of the Thylacine (Tasmanian tiger).Carol Freeman - 2007 - Society and Animals 15 (3):241-256.
    The thylacine was a shy and elusive nonhuman animal who survived in small numbers on the island of Tasmania, Australia, when European settlers arrived in 1803. After a deliberate campaign of eradication, the species disappeared 130 years later. Visual and verbal constructions in the nineteenth century labeled the thylacine a ferocious predator, but photographs of individuals in British and American zoos that were used to illustrate early twentieth-century zoological works presented a very different impression of the animal. The publication of (...)
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  12.  14
    The photographic image: The Face of Sydney and August Sander’s typologies.John Lechte - 2013 - Philosophy of Photography 4 (2):191-204.
    Taking the Face of Sydney – which is a digital composite image – as its point of departure this article begins an investigation into the relation between August Sander’s Weimar facial typologies and the digital Face of Sydney. This leads on to a reflection on the nature of the photographic image in relation to knowledge, technology and time. The conclusion proposed is that the photographic image has to be understood as an entity that is quite distinct from the (...)
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  13.  14
    Lyric images, everlasting instants: The photographic works of Tacita Dean and Roni Horn.Becca Thornton - 2018 - Philosophy of Photography 9 (1):22-40.
    Of the most recent turn to literary practices in contemporary art, this article studies one facet: that which relates to the lyric tradition. It hopes to make a case for ‘lyric images’, drawing on the works by artists Tacita Dean, Day for Night (2009), and Roni Horn, Still Water [...] (1999). Read around poems by Emily Dickinson, John Fuller and Margaret Atwood, how these artworks utilize photography’s natural capacity to mirror both the recursive syntactic structure and the blending of instantaneity (...)
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  14.  36
    Image Ethics: The Moral Rights of Subjects in Photographs, Film, and Television.Larry P. Gross, John Stuart Katz & Jay Ruby (eds.) - 1988 - Oup Usa.
    This pathbreaking collection of thirteen original essays examines the moral rights of the subjects of documentary film, photography, and television.
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  15. Fixing the Image: Re-thinking the 'Mind-independence' of Photographs.Dawn M. Phillips - 2009 - Postgraduate Journal of Aesthetics 6 (2):1-22.
    We are told by philosophers that photographs are a distinct category of image because the photographic process is mind-independent. Furthermore, that the experience of viewing a photograph has a special status, justified by a viewer’s knowledge that the photographic process is mind-independent. Versions of these ideas are central to discussions of photography in both the philosophy of art and epistemology and have far-reaching implications for science, forensics and documentary journalism. Mind-independence (sometimes ‘belief independence’) is a term employed to (...)
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  16.  12
    Images of a Vanished Era, 1898-1924: The Photographs of Walter C. Schneider.Lucian Niemeyer (ed.) - 2007 - University of Missouri.
    "Previously unpublished images from glass-plate negatives taken by Walter Schneider capture the years of transition from agrarian to industrial society in America and beyond.
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  17. The ontology of the photographic image.André Bazin - 2010 - In Marc Furstenau (ed.), The film theory reader: debates and arguments. New York: Routledge.
  18. Against Imprinting: The Photographic Image as a Source of Evidence.Dawn M. Wilson - 2022 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 89 (4):947-969.
    A photographic image is said to provide evidence of a photographed scene because it is a causal imprint of reflected light, an indexical trace of real objects and events. Though widely established in the history, theory, and philosophy of photography, this traditional imprinting model must be rejected because it relies on a “single-stage” misconception of the photographic process: the idea that a photographic image comes into existence at the time of exposure. In its place, a “multistage” account (...)
     
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  19.  4
    Images of the Ozarks: Photographs.Charles J. Farmer - 1998 - University of Missouri.
    A gathering of more than 120 beautiful color photographs from both professional and amateur photographers captures the timeless splendor of the Ozark region and includes an informative introduction that reviews the history and unique topography of the area. UP.
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  20.  19
    Photographing Medicine: Images and Power in Britain and America since 1840Daniel M. Fox Christopher Lawrence.Barbara Melosh - 1989 - Isis 80 (4):681-682.
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  21. The Photographic Image.Liam Hudson - 1990 - In P. J. Hampson, D. F. Marks & Janet Richardson (eds.), Imagery: Current Developments. Routledge. pp. 223--246.
     
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  22.  24
    Dust Plate, Retina, Photograph: Imaging on Experimental Surfaces in Early Nineteenth-Century Physics.Chitra Ramalingam - 2015 - Science in Context 28 (3):317-355.
    ArgumentThis article explores the entangled histories of three imaging techniques in early nineteenth-century British physical science, techniques in which a dynamic event (such as a sound vibration or an electric spark) was made to leave behind a fixed trace on a sensitive surface. Three categories of “sensitive surface” are examined in turn: first, a metal plate covered in fine dust; second, the retina of the human eye; and finally, a surface covered with a light-sensitive chemical emulsion (a photographic plate). (...)
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  23.  4
    Science in Sight: Scientific Photographs From the Image Archive, Eth Bibliothek.Monika Burri - 2013 - Scheidegger & Spiess.
    ETH-Bibliothek, the main library at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich's, is holding in its Image Archive vast collections of photographs. Among them is the complete, and so far only little examined, collection of ETH Zurich's own Photographic Institute throughout its existence as an independent service and research unit between 1886 and 1979. The new, third volume in the series Pictorial Worlds. Photographs from the Image Archive, ETH-Bibliothek documents both main aspects of scientific photography: servicing research in many (...)
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  24. Front and back covet image: DJ Simpson: JorreyCanyon 2003 (2440 x 2440 x 20mm), Gloss HPL on Birth plywood. Front cover photograph by Hannah Jamieson: DJ Simpson at the Mead Gallery, Warwick Arts Centre: exhibition mated by Sarah Shaigosky and Ronnie Simpson. [REVIEW]Jm Bernstein - 2007 - In Diarmuid Costello & Jonathan Vickery (eds.), Art: key contemporary thinkers. New York: Berg. pp. 215.
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  25. Notes on the photographic image.Jacques Rancière - 2009 - Radical Philosophy 156:8-15.
     
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  26.  9
    The formation of photographic images in single crystals of lead iodide.R. I. Dawood & A. J. Forty - 1963 - Philosophical Magazine 8 (90):1003-1008.
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  27.  14
    On the photographic status of images produced by generative adversarial networks (GANs).Antonio Somaini - 2022 - Philosophy of Photography 13 (1):153-164.
    The text analyses the new images produced by artificial neural networks such as Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) from the perspective of photography and, more specifically, cameraless photography. The images produced by GANs are located within the wider framework of the impact of machine learning technologies on contemporary visual culture and contemporary artistic practices. In the final section, the article focuses on the work of two artists who have explicity tackled the relations between GAN-generated images and the traditions of photography and (...)
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  28.  26
    Relationality and the photographic image: Of sovereignty, singularity, or loneliness?Rosalyn Diprose - 2019 - Angelaki 24 (3):21-35.
    This paper develops a political ontology of relationality that can account for the dramatic impact that photographs of the plight of others can have on the course of the political. The aim...
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  29.  23
    The Movement-Image Compatibility Effect: Embodiment Theory Interpretations of Motor Resonance With Digitized Photographs, Drawings, and Paintings.Mark-Oliver Casper, John A. Nyakatura, Anja Pawel, Christina B. Reimer, Torsten Schubert & Marion Lauschke - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9:326863.
    To evoke the impression of movement in the “immobile” image is one of the central motivations of the visual art, and the activating effect of images has been discussed in art psychology already some hundred years ago. However, this topic has up to now been largely neglected by the researchers in cognitive psychology and neuroscience. This study investigates – from an interdisciplinary perspective – the formation of lateralised instances of motion when an observer perceives movement in an image. A first (...)
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  30.  18
    Why be a photographic image?Yanai Toister - 2014 - Philosophy of Photography 5 (2):161-167.
    Many contemporary imaging systems share a striking quality: their output need not be limited to images. Instead the raw data such systems collect and generate can just as easily appear as acoustic signals or as text. Furthermore, of those images an unexpected proportion bears the familiar form of the photograph. These two phenomena, I argue, stem from an unconditioned bias towards images, on our behalf, and from the cognitive accessibility of photographic images in particular. This should be seen as (...)
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  31. Transparency and the photographic image.Jonathan Friday - 1996 - British Journal of Aesthetics 36 (1):30-42.
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  32.  2
    International Garden Photographer of the Year: Collection Four: Images of a Green Planet.Philip Smith - 2011 - Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
    This stunning paperback volume showcases the winners and best entries for the International Garden Photographer of the Year competition and accompanies a major exhibition at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, in May 2011 and touring the UK and USA thereafter. ‘The contemporary camera maybe a technological marvel but it can’t take photographs, only the photographer can do that. To succeed it involves making an incredible complex of choices and only one chance in the entire history of time to make them (...)
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  33.  11
    Transparency And The Photographic Image.Jonathan Friday - 1996 - British Journal of Aesthetics 36 (1):30-42.
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  34. Would you trust a photograph? Common knowledge and social theory in the age of the digital image.E. Chaplin - 1998 - Communication and Cognition. Monographies 31 (2-3):197-212.
     
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  35.  8
    Body Inversion Effects With Photographic Images of Body Postures: Is It About Faces?Emma L. Axelsson, Rachel A. Robbins, Helen F. Copeland & Hester W. Covell - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  36. The Homoerotic Photograph: Male Images From Durieu/Delacroix to Mapplethorpe.Allen Ellenzweig - 1992 - Columbia University Press.
    Gathered here are 127 beautiful and provocative duotone photographs that reflect the wide-ranging history of male homoeroticism as revealed by the camera - amply suggesting spiritual, physical, and intellectual exchange between men.
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  37.  7
    Teenie Harris, Photographer: Image, Memory, History.Cheryl Finley, Laurence Admiral Glasco & Joe William Trotter - 2011 - University of Pittsburgh Press.
    "Charles "Teenie" Harris photographed the events and daily life of African Americans for the Pittsburgh Courier, one of the nation's most influential Black newspapers. From the 1930s to 1970s, Harris created a richly detailed record of public personalities, historic events, and the lives of average people. In 2001, Carnegie Museum of Art purchased Harris's archive of nearly 80,000 photographic negatives, few of which are titled and dated; the archive is considered one of the most important documentations of 20th?century African (...)
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  38.  5
    Criticizing Photographs: An Introduction to Understanding Images. [REVIEW]Diana Emery Hulick - 1992 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 26 (2):109.
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  39.  3
    The Culling of Photographic Images.Olga Goriunova - 2021 - Nordic Journal of Aesthetics 30 (61-62):94-97.
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  40. The public rendition of images médusées : exhibiting souvenir photographs taken at lynchings in America.Roger I. Simon - 2013 - In Ranjan Ghosh & Ethan Kleinberg (eds.), Presence: philosophy, history and cultural theory for the twenty-first century. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press.
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  41.  38
    VII—Reflecting, Registering, Recording and Representing: From Light Image to Photographic Picture.Dawn M. Wilson - 2022 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 122 (2):141-164.
    Photography is valued as a medium for recording and visually reproducing features of the world. I seek to challenge the view that photography is fundamentally a recording process and that every photograph is a record—a view that I claim is based on a ‘single-stage’ misconception of the process. I propose an alternative, ‘multi-stage’ account in which I argue that causal registration of light is not equivalent to recording and reproducing an image. Intervention or non-intervention by photographers is more sophisticated than (...)
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  42.  39
    The sound of photographic image.Atau Tanaka - 2012 - AI and Society 27 (2):315-318.
  43.  11
    Gisela Parak. Photographs of Environmental Phenomena: Scientific Images in the Wake of Environmental Awareness, USA 1860s–1970s. 256 pp., figs., bibl. Bielefeld: Transcript Verlag, 2016. $45. [REVIEW]D. Graham Burnett - 2018 - Isis 109 (2):414-415.
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  44.  3
    The “intentional function” in still and moving photographic images.Michael Betancourt - 2023 - Semiotica 2023 (253):71-80.
    What is the role of intention in the identification of encoding that arises for images and other non-lexical objects of semiosis? This proposal of the “intentional function” resolves the syntagmatic problems posed by visual imagery: it identifies the viewer’s treatment of what they encounter as if it is encoded based on formal non-signifying cues visible in the image and learned through past experience. This decision about the organization and structure of the work becomes apparent from the consideration of a (...) “selfie” made by a monkey in the rainforest. (shrink)
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  45. Subverting the racist lens: Frederick Douglass, humanity and the power of the photographic Image.Bill Lawson & Maria Brincker - 2017 - In Bill Lawson & Celeste-Marie Bernier (eds.), Pictures and Power: Imaging and Imagining Frederick Douglass 1818-2018. by Liverpool University Press.
    Frederick Douglass, the abolitionist, the civil rights advocate and the great rhetorician, has been the focus of much academic research. Only more recently is Douglass work on aesthetics beginning to receive its due, and even then its philosophical scope is rarely appreciated. Douglass’ aesthetic interest was notably not so much in art itself, but in understanding aesthetic presentation as an epistemological and psychological aspect of the human condition and thereby as a social and political tool. He was fascinated by the (...)
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  46.  36
    Another Look at Heideggerian Cinema: Cinematic Excess, Antonioni's Dead Time and the Film-Photographic Image as Copy.Michael Josiah Mosely - 2018 - Film-Philosophy 22 (3):364-383.
    Within the loose group of studies that are sometimes labelled Heideggerian cinema – studies in which scholars consider film in conjunction with Heidegger's philosophy – little attention has been paid to Heidegger's actual view of cinema. This omission is not only odd but it is also problematic. In the off-hand comments Heidegger directs towards film throughout his collected works he criticises the medium for its covering over of Being, a fact that makes engaging with film through Heidegger's thinking a questionable (...)
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  47.  14
    Sparks of reality: on the temporalities of the photographic image.Nélio Conceição - 2018 - Aisthesis. Pratiche, Linguaggi E Saperi Dell’Estetico 11 (2):179-188.
    Within the context of the contemporary heterogeneity of photographic practices, the present text describes some of the possibilities of understanding the temporality of photographs, giving an account of some important theoretical references. Bearing this in mind, describing photographs as sparks of reality is a way of expanding the Benjaminian proposal and avoiding the strict logics of causality. The strength of photography unfolds the technologically rooted paradox of photographs, whose contemporary relevance can be analysed in the intersection between aesthetics, history (...)
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  48.  16
    World without colour and its photographs and optical images.Reza Tavakol - 2020 - Philosophy of Photography 11 (1):79-97.
    Photographs and optical images, whatever their contents, are imprints of the electromagnetic waves in the (human) visible range of wavelengths, we refer to as light. Furthermore, they are designed to portray different parts of the visible light in terms of different colours, in analogy with the human eyes, however imperfectly. The world outside our eyes and cameras, however, is permeated by electromagnetic waves with much wider spectrum of wavelengths than those in the visible range. Importantly also, colour is a construct (...)
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  49. The photographic fallacy in the debate about mental imagery.Ned Block - 1983 - Noûs 17 (4):651-62.
    There has been considerable debate among philosophers and psychol- ogists about whether the internal representations of imagery represent in the manner of pictures or in the manner of language. One side, pictorialism,holds that an internal imagery representation of Reagan is like a picture of Reagan. The other side, descriptionalism,holds that an internal imagery representation of Reagan is more like a string of words denoting or describing Reagan. My aim here is to expose a widespread fallacy on the part of the (...)
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  50.  4
    The Photographic Paradigm.Annette W. Balkema & Henk Slager (eds.) - 1997 - BRILL.
    This issue investigates the meaning of photographic image for contemporary art. In Malraux' dream, photography offers the ultimate guarantee for a coherent presentation of art. However, as Douglas Crimp has stated, the appearance and enhancement of photography as a form of art among other art forms disrupted the center of the art world. What does this mean for art and philosophy in our time? Various artists and theorists will delve into that question: Christian Boltanski, Benjamin H.D. Buchloh, Jean-François Chevrier, (...)
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