Exposed: Voyeurism, Surveillance and the Camera

Have we become a society of voyeurs? The proliferation of cell-phone cameras, YouTube videos, and reality television series would certainly suggest that this is so. Pictures can now be made using infrared technology to penetrate darkness or satellites to create omniscient views. If our capacity to look seems increasingly boundless, however, it also threatens to make us a nation under surveillance. Amid endless political debates about terrorism, the security camera has become one of the icons of our age. Aided and abetted by the camera, voyeurism and surveillance provoke uneasy questions about who is looking at whom. Yet there have been surprisingly few attempts to examine the history of might be called invasive looking. Published to coincide with a major exhibition at Tate Modern, “Exposed” aims to fill this critical void. Recognizing that voyeurism has inspired photographers since the inception of the medium, this book reveals the myriad ways in which artists have probed its fascinations, dangers, and cultural significance. The imagery collected here, ranging from the 1870s to the present day, presents an alternately shocking, illuminating, and witty perspective on subjects both iconic and taboo. From shortly after the invention of photography, hidden cameras in public places and voyeuristic treatments of sexuality raised questions about the new medium's uses that are still rehearsed today. The invasive techniques of paparazzi, amateur shots of disasters from the Hindenburg to 9/11, police surveillance photography and the recent trend of self-documentation of sex, crime and other private acts are all examined and explored by leading critics, alongside the work of some of the leading artists of the past 100 years. The contributors include Simon Baker, Philip Brookman, Carol Squiers, Marta Gili and Richard B. Woodward.

Details

Personalities

Dane Bill, d'Olivier Louis-Camille, Weegee, Alpern Merry, Shahn Ben, Brassaï, Winogrand Garry, Boiffard Jacques‑André, Araki Nobuyoshi, Martin Paul, Evans Walker, Genthe Arnold, Lange Dorothea, Cartier‑Bresson Henri, Levitt Helen, Degas Edgar, Bellocq John Ernest Joseph, Barker Stephen, Mapplethorpe Robert, Meiselas Susan, Goldin Nan, Banbury Doris, Saunders William, Howard Tom, Adams Eddie, Zapruder Abraham, Lutz Oliver, Devlin Lucinda, Engle Horace, diCorcia Philip-Lorca, Tichý Miroslav, Hernandez Anthony, Epstein Mitch, Moulin Felix Jacques, Belloc Auguste, Molinier Pierre, Ray Man, Kōhei Yoshiyuki, Toloui Cammie, Dorfman Elena, McCombe Leonard, Peress Gilles, Cisar Rudolf, Herrmann Rudolph, Garanger Marc, Demand Thomas, Ruff Thomas, Jacir Emily, Iveković Sanja, Gossage John, Yokomizo Shizuka, Gordon Richard, Sester Marie, Warhol Andy, Ono Yoko, Pierson Pierre‑Louis, Secchiaroli Tazio, Stoughton Cecil, Ut Nick, Reekie John, Eppridge Bill, Shames Stephen, Ristelhueber Sophie, Farocki Harun, Newton Helmut, Bourdin Guy, Stoerchle Wolfgang, Avedon Richard, Dudognon Georges, Hooper William Willoughby, Browne Malcolm, Benson Harry, Norfolk Simon, Kremer Shai, Lowy Benjamin, Olley Jonathan, Magdanz Andreas, Duncan Jimmie A., Spagna Ted, Joel Yale, Verene Chris, Berard Christian, Geppetti Marcello, Galella Ron, Jackson Alison, Miller Lee, Metinides Enrique, Clark Larry, Paglen Trevor, Salomon Erich, Edgerton Harold Eugene, Ruwedel Mark, Probst Barbara, Nauman Bruce, Burke Bill, Kelly George E., Gatley Dave, Gardner Alexander, Windig Ad, Piller Peter, Spinatsch Jules, Long Laurie, Calle Sophie, Gomes Alair, Klier Michael, Primoli Giuseppe, Crandall Jordan, Hine Lewis Wickes, Frank Robert, Strand Paul, Riis Jacob, Voth Heinrich Richert, Callahan Harry Morey

Type

Book

Place of publication

London

Year

2010

Number of pages

256 pages

Language

English

ISBN

9781854379252

Open stacks or available on request

Open stacks

Illustrations

Yes

Bibliography

No

UDC code and author sign

777.51 2010

Volumes

1

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