Photographic World Picture

Regular price €62.99
Quantity:
Will Deliver When Available
Will Deliver When Available
14 days return policy Shipping & Delivery
19th century
A01=Andrew Moisey
abstraction
artistic technique
Author_Andrew Moisey
baroque
bechers
canaletto
Category=AB
Category=AGA
Category=AJ
cityscape
development of photgraphic technology
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
forthcoming
grand tour illustration
gursky
landscape
modernism
philosophy
photographic history
picture plane
roccoco
romanticism
vermeer
walker evans

Product details

  • ISBN 9780300285208
  • Dimensions: 203 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: Yale University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
Secure checkout Fast Shipping Easy returns

A dynamic prehistory of photography tracing the medium through more than four centuries of Western art
 
The prehistory of photography is often told as a story of science, of a magic arising from the camera obscura and advances in chemistry, but not as a history of art. In this exhilarating and erudite book, Andrew Moisey uses a practicing photographer’s perspective to show how a sense of “being there”—the immediacy, takenness, and embodiment inherent in a photograph—originates in the Western art of everyday life before photography. Moisey argues that photography’s spirit appears in art before its invention—and that its invention sets the standard of first-person subjectivity on which Impressionism and Modernism were raised.
 
Spanning over four centuries from the Renaissance to today, the book shows how pictorial models of the present shift from “world pictures” to embodied, situated encounters before photography’s invention, giving paintings and prints a crucial role in photography’s ancestry for the first time. Moisey then reverses the book’s perspective to reveal how photographic artists in the twentieth century used graphic abstraction to resurrect the early modern “world picture” of life. Drawing on his experiences as both a scholar and a photographer, Moisey grounds his book in art history and his own first-hand experience. 
 

Andrew Moisey is assistant professor in the Department of History of Art & Visual Studies at Cornell University.

More from this author