In his previous book City Gorged with Dreams (2002), Ian Walker challenged established ideas about Surrealist photography by emphasising the key role played by documentary photographs in Parisian Surrealism. Now Walker turns his attention to the arrival of Surrealism in England in 1936. Examining for the first time the surprising relationship between Surrealism and English documentary photography and film, the book shows that some of the most interesting work of the period was made in the ambiguous spaces between them. One of the key themes in this book is the relationship between the ‘homely’ and the ‘exotic’, in the innovative mix of poetry and ethnography in Mass-Observation for example, or the shadowed England constructed in the work of Bill Brandt. Based on extensive archival research, interviews and visits to sites where the photographs were made, this book is rich in detailed analysis yet written in an accessible and often witty style.
Les mer
Students and lecturers in photography, art history, Englishness and documentary studies
List of figuresAcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. Paul Nash - the genius of the place2. Seaside Surrealism - Nash in Swanage3. The Comic Sublime - Eileen Agar at Ploumanac’h4. The Road is wider - Penrose and Miller in the Balkans5. ‘Subjective Cameras’ - Humphrey Jennings and Mass-Observation6. Up North - Spender, Trevelyan and Brandt7. Revenge on culture - the Surrealism of the Blitz8. The street and the beach BibliographyIndex
Les mer
In his previous book City Gorged with Dreams (2002), Ian Walker challenged established ideas about Surrealist photography by emphasising the key role played by documentary photographs in Parisian Surrealism. Now Walker turns his attention to the arrival of Surrealism in England in 1936. Examining for the first time the surprising relationship between Surrealism and English documentary photography and film, the book shows that some of the most interesting work of the period was made in the ambiguous spaces between them. One of the key themes in this book is the relationship between the ‘homely’ and the ‘exotic’, in the innovative mix of poetry and ethnography in Mass-Observation for example, or the shadowed England constructed in the work of Bill Brandt. Based on extensive archival research, interviews and visits to sites where the photographs were made, this book is rich in detailed analysis yet written in an accessible and often witty style.
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780719073403
Publisert
2007-11-01
Utgiver
Vendor
Manchester University Press
Høyde
240 mm
Bredde
170 mm
Dybde
14 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Forfatter

Biographical note

Ian Walker is Reader in the History of Photography at the University of Wales, Newport