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Mark Neville: Fancy Pictures
Hardback
Main Details
Title |
Mark Neville: Fancy Pictures
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Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Mark Neville
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Physical Properties |
Format:Hardback | Pages:224 | Dimensions(mm): Height 262,Width 295 |
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Category/Genre | Individual photographers |
ISBN/Barcode |
9783869309088
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Classifications | Dewey:779.092 |
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Audience | |
Illustrations |
illustrated in colour and black and white throughout
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Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Steidl Publishers
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Imprint |
Steidl Verlag
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Publication Date |
13 October 2016 |
Publication Country |
Germany
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Description
Fancy Pictures brings together seven of Mark Neville's socially engaged and intensely immersive projects from the last decade. Neville often pictures working communities in a collaborative process intended to be of direct, practical benefit to his subjects. The Port Glasgow Book Project (2004) is a book of his social documentary images of the Scottish town. Never commercially available, copies were given directly to all 8,000 residents. Deeds Not Words (2011) focuses on Corby, an English town that suffered serious industrial pollution. Neville produced a book to be given free to the environmental health services department of each of the 433 local councils in the UK. Battle Against Stigma and Helmand are both projects resulting from Neville's time in Afghanistan. Two projects for the USA are also included. Invited by the Andy Warhol Museum in 2012, Neville examined social divisions in Pittsburgh, and the photo-essay. Here is London, commissioned by The New York Times Magazine, echoes the style of the celebrated photographers who documented the boom and bust of the 1970s and '80s.
Reviewsa much-needed mid-career survey into the UK's most interesting contemporary social documentarian.--Jeffrey Ladd "Time, Best Photobooks of 2016" He talks with his subjects, comes to know them, and allows them their rightful part in the making of the pictures.--David Campany "The New Yorker" Neville has travelled from Scotland to Pittsburgh, Helmand and beyond, documenting humanity with a clarity of purpose defined by social responsibility-- "The Guardian"
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