American geography : a reckoning with a dream Matt Black.

By: Black, Matt [photographer,, author.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: London : Thames & Hudson Ltd, 2021Description: 167 pages : illustrations ; 27 x 27 cmContent type: still image | text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780500545355; 0500545359Uniform titles: Photographs. Selections Subject(s): Black, Matt | 2000-2099 | Documentary photography | Photography, Artistic | Poverty -- United States -- Pictorial works | Poor -- United States -- Portraits | Photographie documentaire | Photographie artistique | Pauvreté -- États-Unis -- Ouvrages illustrés | documentary photography | art photography | PHOTOGRAPHY -- General | Social conditions | Rural conditions | Poverty | Poor | Economic history | Documentary photography | Photography, Artistic | United States -- History -- 21st century -- Pictorial works | United States -- Social conditions -- 21st century -- Pictorial works | United States -- Economic conditions -- 21st century -- Pictorial works | United States -- Rural conditions -- 21st century -- Pictorial works | États-Unis -- Histoire -- 21e siècle -- Ouvrages illustrés | États-Unis -- Conditions sociales -- 21e siècle -- Ouvrages illustrés | États-Unis -- Conditions économiques -- 21e siècle -- Ouvrages illustrés | United StatesGenre/Form: Portraits. | History. | Pictorial works. | Illustrated works. | Portraits. | Catalogs. DDC classification: 779.092 | 779.20973 LOC classification: TR655 | .B54252 2021
Contents:
South and West -- South and East -- North and East -- North and West.
Summary: American Geography' is the visual record of Magnum photographer Matt Black's five-year, 100,000-mile road trip across 46 states of the United States, plus Puerto Rico. It examines the conditions of powerlessness, prejudice and pragmatism among America's poor. The project originated in Matt Black's exploration of his own home town in California's rural Central Valley - a place that has been called 'the other California' - where one third of the population lives in poverty. Travelling out from that location in 2015, he went on to visit designated 'poverty areas' - places with poverty rates of above 20% as defined by the US census. He found that, rather than being anomalies, 'poverty areas' are never more than two-hour's drive apart. They are woven throughout the fabric of the country, yet are cut off from the 'land of opportunity'. Matt Black's compelling black and white photographs, from which one can trace a line back to the FSA Photographers of the 1930s and 1940s such as Walker Evans and Dorothea Lange, are accompanied by his own travelogue - an eclectic combination of observations, overheard conversations in cafes and city buses, diner menus, bus timetables, historical facts and echoes from daily news reports - which enrich the vivid portrait of these 'states of un-America.'
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Item type Current location Home library Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Reference Reference Central Library (CL)
Central Library (CL)
Lincoln Corner 779.092 BLA (Browse shelf) Not for loan LC-393
Total holds: 0

"With 97 Illustrations."

South and West -- South and East -- North and East -- North and West.

American Geography' is the visual record of Magnum photographer Matt Black's five-year, 100,000-mile road trip across 46 states of the United States, plus Puerto Rico. It examines the conditions of powerlessness, prejudice and pragmatism among America's poor. The project originated in Matt Black's exploration of his own home town in California's rural Central Valley - a place that has been called 'the other California' - where one third of the population lives in poverty. Travelling out from that location in 2015, he went on to visit designated 'poverty areas' - places with poverty rates of above 20% as defined by the US census. He found that, rather than being anomalies, 'poverty areas' are never more than two-hour's drive apart. They are woven throughout the fabric of the country, yet are cut off from the 'land of opportunity'. Matt Black's compelling black and white photographs, from which one can trace a line back to the FSA Photographers of the 1930s and 1940s such as Walker Evans and Dorothea Lange, are accompanied by his own travelogue - an eclectic combination of observations, overheard conversations in cafes and city buses, diner menus, bus timetables, historical facts and echoes from daily news reports - which enrich the vivid portrait of these 'states of un-America.'

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