On Feminism: Aperture 225
By (Author) Michael Famighetti
By (author) Zanele Muholi
By (author) Laurie Simmons
By (author) Johanna Fateman
By (author) Zackary Drucker
By (author) A L Steiner
By (author) Nancy Princenthal
By (author) Laura Guy
By (author) Eva Daz
By (author) Eva Respini
Aperture
Aperture
28th February 2017
United States
General
Non Fiction
770
Paperback
152
Width 235mm, Height 307mm
The winter issue of Aperture magazine offers a survey of speculations, propositions, and schemes regarding new directions in contemporary photography, focusing on how photographers today respond to the new possibilities offered by technological advancement and dissemination.
Nancy Princenthal is a New York-based writer. A former senior editor of Art in America, where she remains a contributing editor, she has also written for the New York Times, Parkett, the Village Voice, and many other publications. She is currently on the faculty of the MFA art writing program at the School of Visual Arts. Her previous book, Agnes Martin, won 2016 PEN/Jacqueline Bograd Weld award for biography. Julia Bryan-Wilson is Associate Professor of Modern and Contemporary Art at the University of California, Berkeley. She is the author of Art Workers: Radical Practice in the Vietnam War Era and editor of Robert Morris (OCTOBER Files). Susan Pack graduated from Princeton in 1973. For 10 years she worked in advertising, latterly as senior copywriter at Saatchi & Saatchi in New York. She began collecting rare advertising posters in the 1970s, in due course acquiring one of the worlds foremost collections of avant-garde Russian film posters.