Art and Photography

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Phaidon Press, Jan 1, 2007 - Art - 304 pages
When published in 2003 Art and Photography was the first book of its kind to survey the major presence of photography at the centre of artistic practice from the 1960s onwards. On its invention, the photograph was considered a purely mechanical, an artless object that could not be included in the fine arts. Despite its increasing use by the twentieth century's most significant artists, only since the late 1960s have art museums gradually begun to exhibit and acquire the photograph as an artwork. Today photography is the pre-eminent artistic medium for contemporary artists. Now available in paperback, this volume provides a comprehensive survey of photography's place in recent art history, further contextualized in the Documents section by original artists' statements and interviews, together with critical and theoretical reflections on the photographic and the art of the photograph.

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About the author (2007)

David Campany is a writer and artist, and Reader in Photography at the University of Westminster, London. He was co-founder of the organization Photoforum, which brings together theorists and practitioners working in the photographic arts. His published work includes essays in Rewriting Conceptual Art, ed. Jon Bird and Michael Newman (Reaktion, 1999); Postcards on Photography: Photorealism and the Reproduction(Cambridge Darkroom, 1998); Cruel and Tender: the Real in the Twentieth Century Photograph(Tate, 2003) and Stillness and Time: Photography and the Moving Image(Photoforum/Photoworks, 2006). He is the editor of the anthology The Cinematic(Whitechapel/MIT Press, 2007) and the author of Photography and Film(Reaktion, 2007).

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