일상의 지도
KR | EN
Lishui Photography Festival
Lishui Museum of Art 6 - 20 Nov 2015 Tianjin Academy of Fine Arts Gallery 5 - 18 April 2016 Laurent Chehere 로랑 셰에르 Stephane Couturier 스테판 쿠튀리에 Hans Eijkelboom 한스 아이켈붐 Lauren Fleishman 로렌 플라이스만 Yoshinori Mizutani 요시노리 미즈타니 Hyewon Keum 금혜원 Yune Kim 김윤 Soosik Lim 임수식 Jenny Odell 제니 오델 Andreas Muller Pohle 안드레아 뮐러 폴 Klaus Pichler 클라우스 피클러 Willem Popelier 윌렘 포펠리에 Jana Romanova 자나 로마노바 Will Steacy 윌 스테이시 Penelope Umbrico 페넬로페 움브리코 Michael Wolf 마이클 울프 Fujii Yoshikatsu 요시카츠 후지 Pablo Zuleta Zahr 파블로 줄레타 자르
Map of Daily Life
KR | EN
The camera may have documented everyday life in the Analog Era, but it now dominates daily life in the Digital Age. According to statistics from May 2015, two billion photographs are uploaded to Facebook each day on average. Although we press the camera button to take a picture so many times a day, there are also cameras filming us all the time. As of 2014, there were just over 200 million active surveillance cameras around the world. From smart phones to satellites, photography is tracking us at every moment.
Map of Daily Life focuses on the relationship between people’s daily life and the countless photos that have penetrated our lives so poignantly. Anyone can become a photographer without actually taking a picture; a person can also become a subject without standing in front of a camera. Today, photographs swim in the form of light through virtual space without being printed on paper. As a result, in the time an image becomes a part of our everyday life, a photo can’t help taking on its very own meaning. Just as the border between art photography and snap photography has become blurred over the years, the authenticity of an event documented through photography began being doubted quite some time ago. Michael Wolf aimed to redefine street photography through Google Street View, while Penelope Umbrico provided insight into the phenomena of how one celestial body—the sun—is constantly reproduced and consumed through photos of sunsets uploaded to the Internet. Exhibits include the same breakfast menu repeatedly photographed every day and satellite landscapes of the Earth’s surface. Through daily life as seen through photography and the view of photography intervening in our lives day in and day out, the exhibition explores how a mechanical device like a camera combined with digital elements to expand the role of photography. |
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