Small Red Buildings
por Stephen Schaub
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Sobre o livro
In fact, they aren't all barns- though some of them are. They're also tool sheds, outhouses, storage shacks, milking sheds. Small buildings that are red.
Driving around Vermont and upstate New York, many things surprise me about them. They strike me as both omnipresent and endangered at the same time: they seem to be everywhere I look until I try to find them. Set against the perfectly contrasting snowy landscape, the little red building conjures up a stereotype, an image out of a movie set, yet in practice they are infinite in their variety and character.
Stalwart and fragile, solid and gaping, in use and abandoned; they wobble and lean, perch, hover, and play hide and seek. Most prefer to be plain, but for those that would be fancy, they have their own brand of finery: white trim, flags, antlers, the occasional wooden fish.
Características e detalhes
- Categoria principal: Arts & Photography Books
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Opção de projeto: Paisagem padrão, 25×20 cm
Nº de páginas: 80 - Data de publicação: jan 20, 2013
- Palavras-chavee vermont barns, new england barns, barns of New York, Sigma DP2 Merrill, Barns southern vermont, indian hill imageworks, Schaub
Sobre o autor
One Week One Book is an experimental series created by artist Stephen Schaub in 2013. Each book was conceived of, executed, and sent to print in the course of a single week. A total of twelve books were made in the series. Documentary in style, they combine a visual wit with a strong aesthetic sensibility. Artist Stephen M. Schaub's works have been described as "art dreaming about itself." In them, rather than experiencing a literal place or a linear story, we encounter something akin to the fragmentation of an emotional memory- or the illogic of a dream. Depicting scenes of unresolved narrative, these images seem to have been subjected to the vagaries of perception and the passage of time. Schaub is an innovator whose works defy classification. In his Vermont studio he combines monumentality of scale with light-sensitive techniques and the presentation of works on paper, to create each singular, unique work of art.