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Podróże po Imperium Rosyjskim: Fotograficzne dziedzictwo Siergieja Prokudyna-

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Journeys through the Russian Empire: The Photographic Legacy of Sergey Prokudin-
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ISBN-13
9781478006022
Book Title
Journeys through the Russian Empire
ISBN
9781478006022
Publication Year
2020
Type
Textbook
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Publication Name
Journeys Through the Russian Empire : the Photographic Legacy of Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky
Item Height
1.5in
Author
William Craft Brumfield
Item Length
12in
Publisher
Duke University Press
Item Width
9in
Item Weight
92.2 Oz
Number of Pages
528 Pages

O tym produkcie

Product Information

This lavishly illustrated volume features hundreds of full-color images of Russian architecture and landscapes taken by early-twentieth-century photographer Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky juxtaposed against those of contemporary photographer and scholar William Craft Brumfield. Together their images document Russia's architectural, artistic, and cultural heritage.

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Duke University Press
ISBN-10
1478006021
ISBN-13
9781478006022
eBay Product ID (ePID)
21038380818

Product Key Features

Author
William Craft Brumfield
Publication Name
Journeys Through the Russian Empire : the Photographic Legacy of Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Publication Year
2020
Type
Textbook
Number of Pages
528 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
12in
Item Height
1.5in
Item Width
9in
Item Weight
92.2 Oz

Additional Product Features

Lc Classification Number
Tr140.P76b78 2020
Reviews
In 1970, an American graduate student set off for what was then the Soviet Union, taking a camera he'd bought for the trip. William Craft Brumfield spent the next half-century travelling through the Soviet Union and its successor states, becoming a specialist in the region's architectural history and a respected photographer in his own right. . . . [A]s Journeys through the Russian Empire quietly illustrates, the desire to preserve religious buildings as part of a national past was not solely a phenomenon of perestroika., This is a work of pure enchantment! William Craft Brumfield's Journeys lead us to some of the most forbidding regions on Earth to reveal centuries-old architectural masterpieces. His photographic odyssey, which parallels the travels of a pioneering Russian photographer in the early 1900s, opens a world of almost supernatural grace and beauty. The images--at times dreamlike, often frozen in the amber light of the far North--portray structures both towering and serene, gemstones of timber and rock that stand as timeless monuments to mysticism and spirituality. The images are spellbinding, but the text is no less so. Professor Brumfield's concluding essay 'Above the Abyss' is a deeply informed meditation on photography, memory, and the arc of Russian history., This large-format book, 520 pages in length, contains some 400 stunning full-color images of ancient churches, towns, and landscapes taken by two great explorers, who have preserved so much of Russian culture through their photography., The journeys wend through little-known towns like Belozersk and Rzhev, and the complexity of their churches and monasteries, full of tiny and intricate details, unfold like flowers before the eyes. Magnificent iconography, graceful 'onion' domes, wildly colorful exteriors, and blended architectural styles keep the eye roving, with descriptions that provide historical context and artistic merit. . . . As intriguing as the photos are, Brumfield's text draws readers in with tales of vast wealth and power and religious devotion. Moreover, Brumfield invites readers to consider not only the circumstances under which the buildings were built, but what happened after Prokudin-Gorsky captured them., The weight of 'time and memory' echoes from this [final] chapter into Brumfield's conclusion, which ruminates on the uses of photography in public memory. His own study is an invaluable contribution to this very question, one that should be read by scholars working on all aspects of Imperial, Soviet and post-Soviet history., In the current climate in the West, with the return to an awareness of Russia being coupled with a renewed sense of threat, William Craft Brumfield's work is a major catalyst for making people aware of the richness of Russian culture. Journeys through the Russian Empire is an innovative book and an invaluable resource for coming generations of cultural historians. Allowing an opportunity to consider loss over time and to think in terms of common human values, it is indispensable to both Russophiles and all those interested in wider issues of restoration, plans for public space, the impact of industrialization and modernization, and the consequences of large-scale population migration., This is a volume of 'places of memory', lieux de mémoire, in Pierre Nora's phrase - but the memories are more than physical, and deeply ambiguous., At the asking price, this large-format book is a bargain, not just for 'content' but for the excellence of production values and design, enhanced by clearly drawn maps for each of the regions covered. Anyone interested in Russian or Central Asian history and culture would find pleasure in having this volume to savor., "Written at the juncture of visual studies and cultural history, Journeys through the Russian Empir e makes a major contribution to the study of the architectural heritage of Russia and Central Asia. . . . Although the book is indeed addressed to a wide circle of readers, we have before us not a 'picture book,' but a serious, multilayered investigation. . . . Brumfield's service can be summarized by the fact that he has simultaneously preserved the legacy of two authors. Exhibits and internet publications are fleeting, but a book is something that remains for the long term. Brumfield's book can be used by researchers as a guide to photographic sources. At the same time, it is a superb guide for travelers planning a trip to Russia and Central Asia." (translated from Russian), Brumfield's own photographs are of exceptional quality, and . . . there is something enthralling for the reader about comparing pictures of a building or set of buildings taken many years apart. . . . What Brumfield does in Journeys is provide visual material and text that provoke reflection on important questions without seeking to provide simplistic answers. He shows the value of Prokudin-Gorskii's photographs while acknowledging that they do not provide an unproblematic insight into a vanished world. He provides an effortless visual and textual history of important sites of Russian ecclesiastical architecture that is accessible to non-specialists., As miraculous and prodigious as Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky's photographic efforts were, William Craft Brumfield's heroically resolute labor to record the Russian built environment of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries is remarkable in its own way. For the past four decades, Brumfield has pursued buildings, cityscapes, and landscapes across the length of Russia, producing what has become the single most important record of the Russian built environment of our era. This period's political tumult makes his work even more significant. Journeys through the Russian Empire is an important record of how Russia changed over a troubled century and will help readers appreciate what will come to be seen as lost worlds., This book is spectacularly beautiful. . . . The book provides a fine introduction to the architectural heritage of the Russian Empire. . . . Scholars of Russian architecture, photography, and culture more broadly will read this book with profit., An extraordinary study of two photographers and, indeed, two Russias. . . . Journeys through the Russian Empire is a masterful achievement that readers will want to savor and return to again and again. In its pages are insightful lessons on everything from color photography to the nature of time. William Craft Brumfield has brought all of his considerable talent, expertise, and energy to produce an invaluable resource for students of Russian history, photography buffs, nature lovers, architecture aficionados, and anyone who longs to explore the expansive Russian empire through the eyes of two eminently talented and devoted photographers., The juxtaposition of these two artists' works provides students and researchers with an excellent study in how artists can view the same subjects in different historical contexts. Prokudin-Gorsky's and Brumfield's photographs show the changes each site underwent, including differences in condition, color, and the effects (or lack) of preservation attempts over time. The photographs also invite discussion of issues such as reconstruction versus restoration and reality versus memory in the history of Russian architecture. Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty., Bill Brumfield's Journeys Through the Russian Empire is a visual and cultural tour d' force. In treading the steps of his legendary imperial predecessor Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky, Brumfield's lens documents and captures why for Russia in particular the architecture and creativity of its buildings is an essential key to understanding its culture and identity, and his images provide a contemporary vision of the enduring core that has given the world Russian culture, art, and architecture. His photos and text, set alongside the images from a century ago, document what neither two world wars nor three quarters of a century of permanent, hostile revolution could destroy or erase from the Russian landscape or vision. Brumfield's pictures and text are essential for anyone truly seeking to understand Russia and its people. It likewise offers the reader a vision about how monuments that reflect what is best in a culture survive even the most determined efforts to undo the values and aspirations they represent., The juxtaposition of these two artists' works provides students and researchers with an excellent study in how artists can view the same subjects in different historical contexts. Prokudin-Gorsky's and Brumfield's photographs show the changes each site underwent, including differences in condition, color, and the effects (or lack) of preservation attempts over time. The photographs also invite discussion of issues such as reconstruction versus restoration and reality versus memory in the history of Russian architecture. Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty., This is a book to be approached slowly and with care. As you move through the eight regions of travel, there is much to be absorbed and to be savored including Brumfield's narrative, which ends at the Solovetsky Transfiguration Monastery, an impressive array of buildings on the Solovetsky Archipelago in the White Sea. . . . This is rich journey worth taking for anyone with an interest in Russia and Russian culture, and it matters not at all whether you have been to Russia or not., Sergei Prokudin-Gorsky's eerie color photographs of the Tsarist empire, made in its waning years before war and revolution, record the serene glories of Russian architecture typically set in a softly glowing pre-industrial landscape. Beginning in the last decades of the Soviet Union, William Craft Brumfield has photographed these same widely dispersed monuments. The resulting juxtaposition of images, taken as much as a century apart, reminds the reader that buildings, like empires, have lives in time., The publication of Journeys through the Russian Empire marks a jubilee of sorts, as its author, William Craft Brumfield, first arrived in Russia in 1970, exactly fifty years earlier. A half century is indeed more than half a lifetime, and over this time Russia has become a second homeland for the scholar. . . . Brumfield thus allows us to compare the appearances of the most significant works of Russian architecture over the course of a century, but this is not his only contribution. He also demonstrates the coexistence of two long-standing artistic traditions of representing works of Russian architecture: the Russian and the foreign.
Table of Content
Acknowledgments vii Author's Note ix Introduction. An Unsentimental Journey 1 Part I. Documenting Cultural Legacies of an Empire Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky: Photographer of an Empire 13 The Intertwining of Two Collections 27 The Prokudin-Gorsky Collection, The Library of Congress 13 The William Craft Brumfield Collection, National Gallery of Art 33 Part II. Journeys 1. The Ancient Heartland 39 2. The West: From Smolensk Southward to Ryazan 101 3. The Northwest: From Lake Ladoga to the Volga Basin 167 4. The Upper Volga: From Valdai Heights to Torzhok 225 5. The Volga from Uglich to Yurevets 277 6. From the Ural Mountains to Siberia 351 7. Central Asia--Turkestan 413 8. North to the Solovetsky Islands 473 Conclusion. Above the Abyss: A Reflection on Photographs as an Instrument of Memory 497 Index 507
Copyright Date
2020
Topic
Individual Photographers / Monographs, Russia & the Former Soviet Union, General, History
Lccn
2019-036070
Intended Audience
Scholarly & Professional
Illustrated
Yes
Genre
Photography, History

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