Laxton – Department of the History of Art https://arthistory.ucr.edu University of California, Riverside Mon, 17 Oct 2016 22:41:22 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://arthistory.ucr.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/favicon.ico Laxton – Department of the History of Art https://arthistory.ucr.edu 32 32 138560291 Confessions*: Rethinking Winogrand’s women https://arthistory.ucr.edu/confessions-rethinking-winogrands-women/ https://arthistory.ucr.edu/confessions-rethinking-winogrands-women/#respond Fri, 06 Feb 2015 18:43:44 +0000 https://arthistory.ucr.edu/?p=567 Read More →]]> ConfessionsConfessions* of a Male Chauvinist Pig
2013, (ed.) Ex. cat. Riverside: California Museum of Photography
Susan Laxton, editor

Confessions* of a Male Chauvinist Pig, a collection of essays written in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name at the California Museum of Photography, reconsiders Garry Winograd’s book project Women Are Beautiful (1975). Women Are Beautiful is a set of 85 photographs culled from the hundreds Winogrand shot of women in public places between 1964 and 1973. Initially bearing the controversial subtitle “Observations of a Male Chauvinist Pig,” Winogrand’s book struggled to find a publisher and then withered in the light of feminist critique once it appeared. Confessions* aims to reorganize the photographs into a critical exhibition that places the project in the context of the turbulent 1960s, at the nexus of gender relations buffeted by the conflicting terms of the sexual revolution and the women’s movement, particularly in light of the consumption of women in media images.

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Paris As Gameboard: Man Ray’s Atgets https://arthistory.ucr.edu/paris-as-gameboard-man-rayos-atgets/ https://arthistory.ucr.edu/paris-as-gameboard-man-rayos-atgets/#respond Fri, 06 Feb 2015 01:00:20 +0000 https://arthistory.ucr.edu/?p=463 Read More →]]> Paris-as-GameboardParis As Gameboard: Man Ray’s Atgets
2002, Ex. cat. New York: The Wallach Gallery
Susan Laxton, author

Soon after moving to France, Man Ray began collecting the works of his forebear Eugene Atget, whose pictures surveyed Paris in the late 19th and early 20th century. Here, for the first time, these images of the urban landscape are considered through a Surrealist frame collectively, as a peripatetic surrealist text comparable to André Breton’s Nadja and Louis Aragon’s Paris Peasant.

 

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