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Social skin : initiation through the bodily transformation of four South African women : an exploration using documentary photographyTurok, Karina January 2002 (has links)
Bibliography: p. 92-93. / My work questions social and cultural constructs of 'normality' and, by focusing on the practices of marginalised communities, questions dominant cultural conventions of female identity, beauty and sexuality. Within visual media, if the private or unsaid of female experience is said, it is seen as subversive. By focusing on four female initiations, my intention is to develop a specific yet complex comparison of different types of initiations. Embedded within the communities I have photographed are unique perceptions of beauty, each of which differs from mainstream notions. My intention is not to exoticise any particular community, but to explore some sub-cultures of female youth in South Africa, and to unfold how these women position themselves in post-Apartheid South Africa. An important component of the work is the relationship of the subject to the documentary process. I hope both to raise questions and also provide some answers concerning how the means of signification functions for the subjects. As the photographer of their transformation process, I am positioned as an outsider in their lives. As a means of acknowledging this, I include a series of photographs taken or directed by the women themselves, alongside my own. In doing so, my intention is to create a visual dialogue with the subjects, effectively offering them the opportunity to reply to my images with their own. This is not meant as a patronising gesture of political correctness, but as a means of attaining a more complete narrative while at the same time exploring complexities inherent in the play between 'inside' and 'outside' perspectives. My editing of their self-portraits positions me as a curator in this facet of the project.
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A look at the job of a section editor on a technical newspaper and a guide to improving illustration techniquesFarmer, Victor J. January 1974 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Boston University. PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authorization To Manage form for this thesis or dissertation. It is therefore not openly accessible, though it may be available by request. If you are the author or principal advisor of this work and would like to request open access for it, please contact us at open-help@bu.edu. Thank you. / 2031-01-01
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Vestiges of a genocide: terror and the sublime in the work of Pieter HugoGoliath, Gabrielle 23 September 2011 (has links)
In
this
research
dissertation
I
argue
that
Pieter
Hugo's
body
of
work
titled
Rwanda
2004:
Vestiges
of
a
genocide
(2004)
can
be
read
according
to
notions
of
the
sublime,
in
particular
those
of
terror
and
the
unpresentable.
I
begin
in
chapter
one
by
tracing
within
the
discourse
of
the
sublime
themes
of
terror
and
the
manner
in
which
certain
sociopolitical
events
can
be
understood
as
sublime
instances
of
terror.
The
essentially
unpresentable
nature
of
such
occurrences
is
another
important
concern.
As
my
focus
is
on
the
aesthetic
produce
of
a
visual
artist
in
regards
to
such
sublime
notions,
I
make
reference
to
various
other
relevant
artworks
and
appropriate
art
theory.
In
chapter
two
I
argue
the
case
for
the
Rwandan
Genocide
as
a
sublime
political
event,
an
instance
of
incommensurable
terror.
In
an
examination
of
Hugo's
Rwanda
2004:
Vestiges
of
a
genocide
I
outline
the
manner
in
which
his
work,
as
an
aestheticization
of
such
terror,
thus
embodies
notions
of
the
sublime.
Via
the
facilitated
experience
of
witness,
I
note
the
manner
in
which
the
art
spectator,
in
response
to
such
work,
experiences
something
of
the
shock
and
horror
associated
with
the
sublime.
As
a
contemporary
artist,
engaging
with
genocide
in
Rwanda,
I
am
careful
to
posit
Hugo's
work
within
the
appropriate
context
of
the
postcolonial,
as
well
as
(in
regards
to
sublime
theory)
the
postmodern.
Chapter
three
examines
a
personal
body
of
work,
Murder
on
7th
(2009)
–
an
investigation
into
the
neurosis
generated
by
the
pervasive
influence
of
violent
crime
in
South
Africa.
Having
already
argued
the
case
for
the
sublime
political
event,
I
propose
for
consideration
certain
social
disorders
like
violent
crime,
as
well
as
HIV/Aids,
as
social
incursions
capable
of
precipitating
the
sublimity
of
terror
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Digital fictions imaging landscape identity and ideologyGeorge, Phillip, University of Western Sydney, College of Arts, School of Communication Arts January 2007 (has links)
The friction between fact and official fiction appears to be a critical factor in all our lives. Bearing artistic witness to contemporary geo political life necessitates the utilisation of the technologies that are deployed at us, as a mirror to deflect and reflect upon the ideologically mediated strikes carried out against us. I have digitally manipulated documentary photography at the microscopic level and reworked the evidence in a manner that remains undetectable. The documentary information digitised the matrices of data as if at a genetic level, causing simulation of the real. This manipulation of the photographic document is seen to critique our contemporary condition where official fictions can now be represented as historic fact. This work challenges the integrity of vision and the nature of evidence by producing fictional documentation at a high resolution, which gives the illusion and authority of a photographic non-fictional representation. From within my studio-based research, what is and will be possible, how a history is recorded and represented, has been interrogated, by using one form of evidence — in this case, the photograph. Artistic works developed throughout the DCA examined the way a visual history is recorded and in this case, photographically represented. Appreciating the ideology of territory was seen as critical, particularly within an international agenda. Territory was established as a site for research. A territorial containment methodology was established. The territorial containment methodology was to simply designate a physical territory and then produce works from within this designated space. The containment methodology started with 18th century Botany Bay moved around to the next bay Little Bay and forward in time to 1969 and the contemporary artists the Christo’s wrapping of the space. Employing the same methodology the research moved into the Australian Western desert then off island to the Middle East. The collective outcomes of the research are represented by solo and group exhibitions and related publications, all of which are recorded within this document. / Doctor of Creative Arts (DCA)
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People in public places /Durrill, J. Edward. January 1991 (has links)
Thesis (M.F.A.)--Rochester Institute of Technology, 1991. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaf 29).
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Saints and pagans /Daughters, Laurence K. January 1983 (has links)
Thesis (M.F.A.)--Rochester Institute of Technology, 1983. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaf 13).
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Technical and aesthetic developments of the photo-essay /Hoffer, Mary Jane. January 1983 (has links)
Thesis (Ed. D.)--Teachers College, Columbia University. / Typescript; issued also on microfilm. Sponsor: Justin Schorr. Dissertation Committee: Louis Forsdale. Bibliography: leaves 229-235.
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The Oldham Road Rephotography ProjectMeecham, Charles January 2015 (has links)
This PhD by prior publication comprises a major rephotography project undertaken in two phases (First View, 1986-89 and Second View, 2009-12), together with a written commentary. The project is based on an area along the A62 which connects Manchester to Oldham, a corridor route, which I considered invisible and between places, a seeming ‘non place’.1 The research questions how can topographic images made by adopting strategies of rephotography help to depict aspects of place that remain hidden in generic representations and how, in turn, this photographic record can be put to use. The accompanying critical commentary investigates how this project came to be realised, the photographic research methodologies employed, and relevant contextual frameworks together with the different contexts through which the work has been disseminated and shared. It considers what the practice of rephotography contributes as a visual research method when analysing the shifting topography of a specific urban corridor. Further to this, it suggests ways in which such rephotography can engage different audiences and communities in debate about lived experience of social and economic change. The First View photographic research project was initially conducted by making a series of visits to the area each year recording transformation through redevelopment projects and subtler changes such as incidental events on the street and the variations of seasons. The project took an ethnographic approach to human involvement with place and space (Massey, D. 1994) as well as drawing upon anthropological methods that employ photography as a research tool (Prosser, J. 1998). Outputs from this project demonstrate processes adopted and examples of the photography made. A selection of photographs from First View became a touring exhibition shown in Oldham and Manchester (1986-87) and then in London. A book was also published by the Architectural Association (1987) with a commentary written by Ian Jeffrey. The second view (2009-12) revisits the first survey and considers what happened after. I wanted to consider twenty five years on how the continued process of change may have increasingly eroded/altered the sense of place 1 This term derives from Marc Augé’s book, Lieux et Non-Lieux (2001). 6 within the community. Since the First View a number of external factors influenced how the research would continue. The political scene had changed with introduction of private initiatives and housing associations taking responsibility to manage and refurbish aging housing stock in the public sector closer to the Manchester and in areas towards Oldham. Further cleared areas remained undeveloped due to a major financial downturn. Also the adoption of digital technologies had changed how photography was made, viewed, and used. This led me to consider how the Second View could be more collaborative (Kester, G. 2011) and so modify my method and find new ways to interact with members of the community to help inform the work. Outputs included exhibitions at Gallery Oldham and The People’s History Museum, Manchester and an accompanying commentary written by Stephen Hanson. I also include reviews and examples of additional collaborative photography made and shown alongside the core exhibitions. Examples of the printed work are now housed in Oldham library (including the complete set of Second View exhibition prints, contact sheets and this written report). It is permanently accessible for public and academic use under a commons license. Although it can be argued that all photographic practice contains elements of rephotography, this project contributes to original knowledge through analysis of processes used to make the first long-term comparative and detailed photographic study of the Oldham Road as an area exemplifying shift from industrialisation to service provision. ‘Hermeneutic perspectives emphasise photographs as texts, demanding semantic and semiotic interpretation to determine meaning’ (Margolis and Rowe, 2012). The corridor is now undergoing further changes as new projects by housing associations and globalised business begin to fill the spaces left by previous clearances. My published work shows connections, continuities and breakages and new questions emerge about what values are worth preserving for a future community. I suggest that a continuing photographic element can contribute to an understanding of incidental detail that can influence a more sensitive management of infrastructure and potentially help residents adjust to change and thus maintain their sense of place.
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A comparison of approaches to documentary photography of 1930s America and contemporary South Africa.Gaule, Sally January 1992 (has links)
A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Arts, University of the Witwatersrand,
Johannesburg, in partlal fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of
Arts in Fine Arts. / The research for this degree comprises a theoretical dissertation and a practical
component of photographs. The theoretical research investigates the practice of
documentary photography in America and South Africa. The photographs of
Walker Evans, Robert Frank, David Goldblatt and Bob Gosanl are examined
against the background of two organisations, the Farm Security Administration
and Drum. These organisations influenced the documentary genre in their
respective countries because of their socio-polltical concerns: their choice and
presentation of subject matter for publication influenced both the photographar and
the viewer.
Documentary photographs appear, because of their seemingly candid and
unmediated nature, to present historically factual images. Examples from the
work of the four photographers reveal their distinction from, continuity with
the confines of the documentary genre. Their respective approaches reveal the
role of perception as it manifests itself in their work. Subjugation, attltudes
towards subject matter, and the pictorial construction of images are analysed in
relation to each photographer's work.
The relationship of image and text in documentary photography is seen as an
element of intervention by the photographer.
The selection of these photographers was motivated for their partinance to the
subject matter and to the pictorial considerations of the candidate. These issues
are therefore examined in relation to the candidate's approach to photography. / Andrew Chakane 2018
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Nicaragua, a society in transition /Stillings, James Mason. January 1982 (has links)
Thesis (M.F.A.)--Rochester Institute of Technology, 1982. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaf 59).
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