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Practice of Light: A Genealogy of Visual Technologies from Prints to Pixels [Kõva köide]

(Goldsmiths, University of London)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 368 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x178x27 mm, 28 b&w illus., 11 color plates; 39 Illustrations
  • Sari: Leonardo
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Sep-2014
  • Kirjastus: MIT Press
  • ISBN-10: 0262027658
  • ISBN-13: 9780262027656
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 368 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x178x27 mm, 28 b&w illus., 11 color plates; 39 Illustrations
  • Sari: Leonardo
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Sep-2014
  • Kirjastus: MIT Press
  • ISBN-10: 0262027658
  • ISBN-13: 9780262027656
Teised raamatud teemal:
An account of Western visual technologies since the Renaissance traces a history of the increasing control of light's intrinsic excess.



An account of Western visual technologies since the Renaissance traces a history of the increasing control of light's intrinsic excess.

Light is the condition of all vision, and the visual media are our most important explorations of this condition. The history of visual technologies reveals a centuries-long project aimed at controlling light. In this book, Sean Cubitt traces a genealogy of the dominant visual media of the twenty-first century&;digital video, film, and photography&;through a history of materials and practices that begins with the inventions of intaglio printing and oil painting. Attending to the specificities of inks and pigments, cathode ray tubes, color film, lenses, screens, and chips, Cubitt argues that we have moved from a hierarchical visual culture focused on semantic values to a more democratic but value-free numerical commodity.

Cubitt begins with the invisibility of black, then builds from line to surface to volume and space. He describes Rembrandt's attempts to achieve pure black by tricking the viewer and the rise of geometry as a governing principle in visual technology, seen in Dürer, Hogarth, and Disney, among others. He finds the origins of central features of digital imaging in nineteenth-century printmaking; examines the clash between the physics and psychology of color; explores the representation of space in shadows, layers, and projection; discusses modes of temporal order in still photography, cinema, television, and digital video; and considers the implications of a political aesthetics of visual technology.

Series Foreword xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1(20)
1 [ black]
21(24)
Black Matters
21(2)
"Rembrandt," or, Invisibility
23(4)
The Night Watch
27(4)
Black as Ink
31(4)
Gray
35(7)
Virtual Black
42(3)
2 Line
45(34)
Rays
45(7)
Diagramming Light
52(8)
Autonomy of the Line
60(4)
Mickey Mouse and the Maid of Corinth
64(6)
Dialectic of the Line
70(4)
Edge and Vector
74(5)
3 Surface
79(74)
3.1 Texture
80(31)
Mezzotint, Aquatint, Lithography
80(3)
Photography: Ansel Adams
83(5)
Halftone and Wire Photography
88(3)
Automation and Control
91(4)
The Raster Grid from CRT to Digital Projection
95(5)
CCD and CMOS
100(4)
The Politics of Number
104(7)
3.2 Color
111(42)
Sensation
111(4)
Johannes de Eyck Fuit Hic
115(5)
Newton
120(6)
Goethe
126(3)
Charles Lock Eastlake and Industrial Chemistry
129(3)
Technicolor
132(4)
Chromolithography, Cartoons, and Childhood
136(2)
Ordering Color
138(6)
Digital Color
144(9)
4 Space
153(82)
4.1 Shadows
155(23)
Volume and Rim
155(5)
Chiaroscuro and Fetish
160(3)
CGI Shading
163(2)
Fog
165(3)
Cast Shadow
168(4)
Shadow Color
172(6)
4.2 Layers
178(24)
Silhouettes
178(3)
Flats and Mattes: Scenography in Theater and Film
181(5)
Pfeiffer, Edwards, Tabrizian
186(4)
Silkscreen
190(5)
3D Cinema: Avatar and T-Visionarium
195(4)
Composites
199(3)
4.3 Projection
202(33)
Flattening: Maps and Graphs
202(6)
Perspective and (Technological) Determinism
208(5)
Tutor-code and Lens
213(4)
Projection and Data Projection
217(4)
From Searchlight to Laser
221(5)
Cubism and the Voxel
226(7)
From Space to Time
233(2)
5 Time
235(30)
Orders of Time
235(1)
The Photograph of Roland Barthes's Mother
236(4)
Intermittence and Continuity
240(4)
Latency in Digital and Analog Media
244(2)
MPEG-4 and Entropy
246(7)
Codec Wars
253(4)
Vector Aesthetics
257(8)
6 Reflection
265(10)
Ancestors
265(6)
Communion as the End of Ethics
271(2)
A Note on the Title
273(2)
Notes 275(6)
References 281(24)
Index 305