Distant Voices: On Steven Seidenberg’s the Architecture of Silence - Hardcover

 
9788869658969: Distant Voices: On Steven Seidenberg’s the Architecture of Silence

Inhaltsangabe

In this volume, scholars and critics from multiple disciplines—art, architecture, anthropology, archaeology, material culture studies, and philosophy—come together to the power and reach of Steven Seidenberg’s work in The Architecture of Silence. Each scholar, artist, or critic here reflects Steven Seidenberg’s work through the lens of their own discipline, creating a remarkably interdisciplinary interrogation of the role of photography to understand landscape, history, places, and time.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Steven Seidenberg is an artist and writer whose collections of photos include Pipevalve: Berlin (Lodima Press, 2017), and the forthcoming The Architecture of Silence: The Abandoned Life of the Italian South. His works of prose, verse, and aphorism include plain sight (Roof Books, 2020), Situi> (Black Sun Lit, 2018), Itch (RAW ArT Press, 2014) and the forthcoming Anon (Omnidawn, 2021). His work has been shown in various venues in Italy, Japan, Germany, Mexico, and the United States.

Carolyn L. White is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Nevada, Reno, where she holds the Mamie Kleberg Chair in Historic Preservation. Her research focuses on cultural heritage, the materiality of daily life, the intersection of and collaboration between art and archaeology, the built environment, and archaeology of the present. She has studied numerous archaeological sites in the mainland US, Hawaii, England, Japan, Italy, and Germany and pioneered the theory and practice of active site archaeology. Her newest book is The Archaeology of Burning Man: The Rise and Fall of Black Rock City (University of New Mexico Press, 2020).

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Seidenberg’s photographs in this volume give us a complex visual record of Italy “as it might have been” had the Riforma Fondiaria been a success, but they also hold a mirror up to the Italian nation about how the country and its countryside really was and is. This project is not journalistic reportage wearing its bias openly. What these images do is to capture the remains of the project and the layers of interaction with the houses and the land surrounding them over the past half a century. ---Giuliana Pieri

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