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Faking It: Manipulated Photography Before Photoshop

Mia Fineman

Stock Number: OR1103844

Price: $60.00 Hardcover
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Photographic manipulation is a familiar phenomenon in the digital era. What will come as a revelation to readers of this captivating, wide-ranging book is that nearly every type of manipulation we associate with Adobe’s now-ubiquitous Photoshop software was also part of photography’s predigital repertoire, from slimming waistlines and smoothing away wrinkles to adding people to (or removing them from) pictures—even fabricating events that never took place. Indeed, the desire and determination to modify the camera image are as old as photography itself; only the methods have changed.

By tracing the history of manipulated photography from the earliest days of the medium to the release of Photoshop 1.0 in 1990, Mia Fineman offers a corrective to the dominant narrative of photography’s development, in which champions of photographic “purity” (such as Paul Strand, Edward Weston, and Henri Cartier-Bresson) get all the glory, while devotees of manipulation (Henry Peach Robinson, Edward Steichen, and John Heartfield, among others) are treated as conspicuous anomalies. Among the techniques discussed on these pages—abundantly illustrated with works from an international array of public and private collections—are multiple exposure, combination printing, photomontage, composite portraiture, overpainting, hand-coloring, and retouching. The resulting images are as diverse in style and motivation as they are in technique. Taking her argument beyond fine art into the realms of politics, journalism, fashion, entertainment, and advertising, Fineman demonstrates that the old adage “the camera does not lie” is one of photography’s great fictions.

 

288 pages | 276 color and black-and-white illustrations | 9.5 x 10.5 inches