用摄影挑战植物盲目性:迈克尔·“尼克”·尼科尔斯为一棵巨大的红杉拍摄的肖像

Elizabeth Howie
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引用次数: 0

摘要

迈克尔·“尼克”·尼科尔斯(Michael“Nick”Nichols)2012年为这棵3200年树龄、247英尺高、被《国家地理》(National Geographic)命名为总统的巨型红杉拍摄的肖像,这棵树是已知的第二大树,由126张单独的照片组成,这些照片经过数字组合制成了一张图像,挑战了文化中的植物盲症,当图像打印在植物纸上时。无论是艺术还是科学插图,摄影新闻图像都将树木和摄影联系起来,既使树木个性化,又隐喻性地引用了它所参与的生物群落。尼科尔斯对肖像的处理方式,认识到了他自己、他的团队和这棵树之间的亲密关系,吸引了人们对植物感知的关注。图像的实质性是以折叠海报的形式发布的,海报印刷在包含树木内容的纸上,能够提醒观众注意植物表现的道德规范。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Contesting plant-blindness with photography: Michael “Nick” Nichols’s portrait of a giant sequoia
Michael “Nick” Nichols’s 2012 portrait of the 3200-year old, 247-foot tall giant sequoia named the President, the second largest tree known, for National Geographic, comprised of 126 separate photographs which have been digitally combined to make one image, challenges cultural plant-blindness and confronts the ethics of representation of plants, in particular trees, when the images are printed on plant-based paper. Neither art nor scientific illustration, the photojournalistic image draws connections between trees and photography, and both individualizes the tree and metaphorically references the biocommunity in which it participates. Nichols’s approach to the portrait, which recognized the intimacy between himself, his team, and the tree, draws attention to plant sentience. The materiality of the image, published as a fold-out poster printed on paper that includes tree content, has the capacity to alert the viewer to the ethics of plant representation.
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来源期刊
Photographies
Photographies Arts and Humanities-Visual Arts and Performing Arts
CiteScore
0.30
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0.00%
发文量
25
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