58 research outputs found

    Recalcitrant Intervention

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    Between 1945 and 1965 Walker Evans was employed by Time Inc. to work for Fortune, the American business and industry magazine. He advised on its photographic direction and produced his own photo-essays, often setting his own assignments, shooting, editing, designing, and writing too. Evans’s complex politics and artistic temperament were at odds with American magazine culture. Many of his photo-essays resisted Fortune’s preference for business, industry, and modern capitalist progress. Instead he celebrated the outmoded, the disappearing, and the overlooked. His layouts and texts often faced the viewer with the ambiguities of photographs as documents. As well as shooting his own projects he worked with archival and vernacular images such as popular postcards. This essay explores three of Evans’s pieces for Fortune: ‘Labor Anonymous’ (1946), ‘Main Street Looking North from Courthouse Square’ (1948) and ‘Homes for Americans’ (1946). As Evans’s ‘museum’ reputation grew in the 1960s and 1970s, his magazine work was forgotten or dismissed as compromised commercialism. The author revisits those pages to show just how seriously Evans took them

    An Essay on Dorothea Lange’s “Migrant Mother”

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    In this essay on Dorothea Lange’s well-known image, written for â€œThe Politics of Seeing”, David Campany reflects upon the politics of imagery and its iconic status, arguing that the more they are seen, the more they are seen; and the more they circulate, the more they circulate – but the less they are understood. More often than not, photographs become iconic when they become default substitutes for the complexities of the history, people or circumstances they could never fully articulate but to which they remain connected, however tentatively

    Une intervention récalcitrante. Les pages de Walker Evans.

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    Entre 1945 et 1965, Walker Evans est employĂ© par Time Inc. et travaille à Fortune, le magazine amĂ©ricain dĂ©diĂ© aux affaires et Ă  l’industrie. Il conseille la direction artistique et produit ses propres essais photographiques, dĂ©terminant souvent lui-mĂȘme les sujets, les prises de vue, l’édition, le graphisme et les textes. La politique complexe et le tempĂ©rament artistique d’Evans contredisent la culture du magazine amĂ©ricain. Nombre de ses articles rĂ©sistent au parti pris de Fortune pour les affaires, l’industrie et le progrĂšs capitaliste moderne, auxquels il prĂ©fĂšre le dĂ©suet, le nĂ©gligĂ© et ce qui disparaĂźt. Ses mises en page et ses textes confrontent souvent le lecteur Ă  l’ambiguĂŻtĂ© de la photographie comme document. Tout en prenant des clichĂ©s pour ses projets, il travaille avec des images vernaculaires – telles les cartes postales populaires – ou tirĂ©es d’archives. Cet article examine trois des articles d’Evans pour Fortune : “Main Street Looking North from Courthouse Square” (1948), “Homes of Americans” (1946) et “Labor Anonymous” (1946). Dans les annĂ©es 1960 et 1970, la rĂ©putation d’artiste “musĂ©al” d’Evans grandit et son travail pour le magazine est oubliĂ© ou Ă©cartĂ©, perçu comme mercantile et compromis. L’auteur revisite ces pages pour montrer l’importance qu’elles revĂȘtaient pour Evans.Between 1945 and 1965 Walker Evans was employed by Time Inc. to work for Fortune, the American business and industry magazine. He advised on its photographic direction and produced his own photo-essays, often setting his own assignments, shooting, editing, designing, and writing too. Evans’s complex politics and artistic temperament were at odds with American magazine culture. Many of his photo-essays resisted Fortune’s preference for business, industry, and modern capitalist progress. Instead he celebrated the outmoded, the disappearing, and the overlooked. His layouts and texts often faced the viewer with the ambiguities of photographs as documents. As well as shooting his own projects he worked with archival and vernacular images such as popular postcards. This essay explores three of Evans’s pieces for Fortune: ‘Labor Anonymous’ (1946), ‘Main Street Looking North from Courthouse Square’ (1948) and ‘Homes for Americans’ (1946). As Evans’s ‘museum’ reputation grew in the 1960s and 1970s, his magazine work was forgotten or dismissed as compromised commercialism. The author revisits those pages to show just how seriously Evans took them

    Recalcitrant Intervention

    Get PDF
    Between 1945 and 1965 Walker Evans was employed by Time Inc. to work for Fortune, the American business and industry magazine. He advised on its photographic direction and produced his own photo-essays, often setting his own assignments, shooting, editing, designing, and writing too. Evans’s complex politics and artistic temperament were at odds with American magazine culture. Many of his photo-essays resisted Fortune’s preference for business, industry, and modern capitalist progress. Instead he celebrated the outmoded, the disappearing, and the overlooked. His layouts and texts often faced the viewer with the ambiguities of photographs as documents. As well as shooting his own projects he worked with archival and vernacular images such as popular postcards. This essay explores three of Evans’s pieces for Fortune: ‘Labor Anonymous’ (1946), ‘Main Street Looking North from Courthouse Square’ (1948) and ‘Homes for Americans’ (1946). As Evans’s ‘museum’ reputation grew in the 1960s and 1970s, his magazine work was forgotten or dismissed as compromised commercialism. The author revisits those pages to show just how seriously Evans took them

    A Questionnaire on the Photobook: Artists

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    Questionnaire on the photobook conceived by JosĂ© BĂ©rtolo and David Campany. Featured artists: Aaron Schuman | Alec Soth | Amak Mahmoodian | AntĂłnio JĂșlio Duarte | Brad Feuerhelm | Daido Moriyama | Gerry Johansson | Guido Guidi | Hoda Afshar | Jason Fulford | Jo Ractliffe | Lieko Shiga | Manuela Marques | MĂ„rten Lange | Martin Parr | Pacifico Silano | Paul Graham | Rinko Kawauchi | Sakiko Nomura | Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa | Terri Weifenbach | Wouter Van de Voord

    Materialities of the Photobook

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    A Questionnaire on the Photobook: Publishers

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    Questionnaire on the photobook conceived by JosĂ© BĂ©rtolo and David Campany. Featured publishers: Akio Nagasawa | Atelier EXB | Blow Up Press | Bookshop M | Chose Commune | Éditions Loco | FW:Books | Libro Arte | Roma Publications | Skinnerboox | STANLEY/BARKER | The Eriskay Connection | Void | XYZ Books | Zen Fot

    Histoire(s) de la photographie

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    L’histoire de la photographie s’est imposĂ©e dans les musĂ©es et les universitĂ©s au cours du dernier tiers du xxe siĂšcle Ă  la faveur d’un « élan ontologique » visant Ă  apprĂ©hender le mĂ©dium dans toute sa gĂ©nĂ©ralitĂ© et sa supposĂ©e unitĂ©. Que cela soit Ă  travers la constitution fragile de l’histoire d’un art autonome dans la lignĂ©e de Beaumont Newhall ou d’approches sĂ©miologiques d’inspiration plus barthĂ©sienne, on prĂ©suppose alors que les images photographiques forment un tout cernable et unifiĂ©..

    Characterization and real-live results of nebulized voriconazole: A single-center observational study

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    Voriconazol; Nebulizador; Enfermedad pulmonar fĂșngicaVoriconazole; Nebulizer; Fungal lung diseaseVoriconazol; Nebulitzador; Malaltia pulmonar fĂșngicaObjetivo la administraciĂłn de voriconazol nebulizado implica ventajas, incluyendo la optimizaciĂłn de la penetraciĂłn pulmonar y la reducciĂłn de los efectos adversos e interacciones; sin embargo, la evidencia sobre su utilizaciĂłn es escasa y no existen presentaciones comerciales especĂ­ficas para nebulizaciĂłn. Nuestro objetivo es caracterizar las soluciones de voriconazol elaboradas para nebulizaciĂłn y describir su uso en nuestro centro. MĂ©todo estudio observacional retrospectivo incluyendo pacientes que reciben voriconazol nebulizado para el tratamiento de enfermedades pulmonares (infecciones fĂșngicas o colonizaciones). La soluciĂłn de voriconazol se preparĂł a partir de los viales comerciales para la administraciĂłn intravenosa. Resultados el pH y la osmolaridad de las soluciones de voriconazol fueron adecuados para su nebulizaciĂłn. Se incluyeron 10 pacientes, 9 adultos y un niño. La dosis fue de 40 mg en los adultos y 10 mg en el paciente pediĂĄtrico, diluido a 10 mg/ml, administrados cada 12-24 horas. La duraciĂłn mediana del tratamiento fue de 139 (rango: 26-911) dĂ­as. No se reportaron efectos adversos y no se detectĂł voriconazol en plasma cuando se administrĂł Ășnicamente vĂ­a nebulizada. Conclusiones la nebulizaciĂłn de voriconazol es bien tolerada y no se absorbe hacia la circulaciĂłn sistĂ©mica. Son necesarios mĂĄs estudios de investigaciĂłn para evaluar su eficacia.Objective Pulmonary administration of voriconazole involves advantages, including optimization of lung penetration and reduction of adverse effects and interactions. However, there is scarce evidence about its use and there are no commercial presentations for nebulization. We aim to characterize a compounded voriconazole solution for nebulization and describe its use in our center. Method This is a retrospective observational study including patients who received nebulized voriconazole to treat fungal lung diseases (infection or colonization). Voriconazole solution was prepared from commercial vials for intravenous administration. Results The pH and osmolarity of voriconazole solutions were adequate for nebulization. Ten patients were included, nine adults and a child. The dosage was 40 mg in adults and 10 mg in the pediatric patient, diluted to a final concentration of 10 mg/ml, administered every 12-24 hours. The median duration of treatment was 139 (range: 26-911) days. There were no reported adverse effects and the drug was not detected in plasma when nebulized only. Conclusion Voriconazole nebulization is well tolerated and it is not absorbed into the systemic circulation; further research is needed to assess its efficacy

    Elevated carbon dioxide and ozone alter productivity and ecosystem carbon content in northern temperate forests

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    Three young northern temperate forest communities in the north‐central United States were exposed to factorial combinations of elevated carbon dioxide ( CO 2 ) and tropospheric ozone (O 3 ) for 11 years. Here, we report results from an extensive sampling of plant biomass and soil conducted at the conclusion of the experiment that enabled us to estimate ecosystem carbon (C) content and cumulative net primary productivity ( NPP ). Elevated CO 2 enhanced ecosystem C content by 11%, whereas elevated O 3 decreased ecosystem C content by 9%. There was little variation in treatment effects on C content across communities and no meaningful interactions between CO 2 and O 3 . Treatment effects on ecosystem C content resulted primarily from changes in the near‐surface mineral soil and tree C, particularly differences in woody tissues. Excluding the mineral soil, cumulative NPP was a strong predictor of ecosystem C content ( r 2  = 0.96). Elevated CO 2 enhanced cumulative NPP by 39%, a consequence of a 28% increase in canopy nitrogen (N) content (g N m −2 ) and a 28% increase in N productivity ( NPP /canopy N). In contrast, elevated O 3 lowered NPP by 10% because of a 21% decrease in canopy N, but did not impact N productivity. Consequently, as the marginal impact of canopy N on NPP (∆ NPP /∆N) decreased through time with further canopy development, the O 3 effect on NPP dissipated. Within the mineral soil, there was less C in the top 0.1 m of soil under elevated O 3 and less soil C from 0.1 to 0.2 m in depth under elevated CO 2 . Overall, these results suggest that elevated CO 2 may create a sustained increase in NPP , whereas the long‐term effect of elevated O 3 on NPP will be smaller than expected. However, changes in soil C are not well‐understood and limit our ability to predict changes in ecosystem C content.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/108065/1/gcb12564.pd
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