Kellner, Thomas - Mexiko
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Verlag: Seltmann
Autor: Thomas Kellner
Buchtyp: Monographie
Sprache: Englisch
Description
Mexico City from the very special point of view of the well-known photo artist Kellner. Fascinating masterpieces are created with his unique slide strip collage technique. How human vision works is better modeled by one of Thomas Kellner's composite photographs than by a painting by Johann Moritz Rugenda (1803-1858), a German traveler who toured Mexico around 1832.This claim is not based on the difference between the two media, but between them and human vision. The photographic camera is a misleading model for human vision, and vice versa. It is an illusion generated by our synthesizing brain that human vision captures an entire scene at once, as a photographic camera does. At each moment, summing up rapid scans of the eyes fixed on small patches of the visual field, the brain is much more likely to construct a scene that never really lasts, but is continually reconstructed as we roam the focal point of our attention.The technique of image composing with multiple photographic images, used by Kellner since 1997 to let us see anew the world's most iconic works of architecture - from Stonehenge to Teotihuacán - comes close to this visual process.
Publication date
July 1, 2015
Format
21 x 29.7 cm
Publisher
Seltmann Publishers
Pages
120
language
English, German
Workmanship
Hardcover, thread binding
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Kellner, Thomas - Mexiko
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