Curtains

Windows on the Unreality We Live In

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, Philosophy, Aesthetics, Art & Architecture, Photography, Health & Well Being, Psychology
Cover of the book Curtains by John Briggs, Between Lines Books & Arts, LLC
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: John Briggs ISBN: 9780996665919
Publisher: Between Lines Books & Arts, LLC Publication: September 29, 2015
Imprint: Between Lines Books & Arts, LLC Language: English
Author: John Briggs
ISBN: 9780996665919
Publisher: Between Lines Books & Arts, LLC
Publication: September 29, 2015
Imprint: Between Lines Books & Arts, LLC
Language: English

Curtains is a dizzying photographic foray into the hidden realities lurking in the folds of puddled curtains that the photographer, John Briggs, found in windows of a central London office building. The photographer puts the curtain folds though simple transformations that result in strange creatures and eerie landscapes that suggest to him that everyday reality might be unreal.

World-renowned black and white photographer Paul Caponigro has called the 32 pages of the curtain series “innuendos for the eye.” Eric Lewis, composer and violinist of Manhattan String Quartet and Prometheus fame calls them “alluring mysteries of abstract, like sensuous musical shapes formed in the mind and filled with undefinable feelings.”

The photographer himself wonders playfully (but perhaps seriously) if the folds of these curtains “are examples of what’s hidden in plain sight all around us, alternative versions of the marvelous unreality we live in.”

The book includes an introduction in which Briggs, who has a Ph.D. in aesthetics, also discusses the nature of abstract art.

 

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Curtains is a dizzying photographic foray into the hidden realities lurking in the folds of puddled curtains that the photographer, John Briggs, found in windows of a central London office building. The photographer puts the curtain folds though simple transformations that result in strange creatures and eerie landscapes that suggest to him that everyday reality might be unreal.

World-renowned black and white photographer Paul Caponigro has called the 32 pages of the curtain series “innuendos for the eye.” Eric Lewis, composer and violinist of Manhattan String Quartet and Prometheus fame calls them “alluring mysteries of abstract, like sensuous musical shapes formed in the mind and filled with undefinable feelings.”

The photographer himself wonders playfully (but perhaps seriously) if the folds of these curtains “are examples of what’s hidden in plain sight all around us, alternative versions of the marvelous unreality we live in.”

The book includes an introduction in which Briggs, who has a Ph.D. in aesthetics, also discusses the nature of abstract art.

 

More books from Psychology

Cover of the book From Cave to Coach by John Briggs
Cover of the book Person-centred and Experiential Therapies by John Briggs
Cover of the book Jumping Ship: What to do so your children don't jump ship to the world when they get older by John Briggs
Cover of the book Attitudes, Behavior, and Social Context by John Briggs
Cover of the book Hypnosis and the Treatment of Depressions by John Briggs
Cover of the book Biological Research on Addiction by John Briggs
Cover of the book Der Weg des Lebenskünstlers by John Briggs
Cover of the book Exploring Our Dreams by John Briggs
Cover of the book Brief Encounters with Couples by John Briggs
Cover of the book Developmental Cognitive Neuropsychology by John Briggs
Cover of the book Graduate Research by John Briggs
Cover of the book Exceptional Children by John Briggs
Cover of the book Matrix of the Mind by John Briggs
Cover of the book Managing Schizophrenia: A Personal Perspective by John Briggs
Cover of the book Nés avec la télé by John Briggs
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy