|
Brassai : Paris By Night | 
enlarge | Author: Brassai Creator: Paul Morand Publisher: Bulfinch Category: Book
List Price: $50.00 Buy New: $14.98 You Save: $35.02 (70%)
Rating: 9 reviews Sales Rank: 366935
Media: Hardcover Pages: 96 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.3 Dimensions (in): 12.7 x 11.1 x 0.7
ISBN: 0821227386 Dewey Decimal Number: 944.3610815 EAN: 9780821227381 ASIN: 0821227386
Publication Date: May 1, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: New. However, Does Have Heavy Shelf Wear. Great Reading Copy. Ships From San Francisco.
| |
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Luminous photographs by Brassa reveal the mysterious allure of nocturnal Paris in a new edition of this classic volume. Beautifully presented, Paris by Night is a stunning portrait of nighttime in the City of Light, as captured by its most articulate observer.
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 4 more reviews...
Paris By Night March 23, 2008 John Davies (Dr) (Evans Head, NSW, Australia) Brassai was probably more responsible than most for generating the noir genre associated with Paris but that, I think, was a function of his equipment. The deserted streets could be a factor of the five minute exposure while the close up shots of the street workers, of all occupations would have been necessary because of the lack of electronic flash. When looking at his pictures, we must be careful to pass them back through the filter of his time. BUT, that same filter has given us some beautifully composed images. There are no accidents. Thus, as well as a wonderful collection of very evocative images, the book can act as a reminder of the importance in engaging the intellect to make such images.
the master of the light April 27, 2006 Adrian del Angel (MTY MEX) is a pleasure to learn how to use available light with the craftmanship of Brassai's pictures of Paris by night with all the life of those years !!
Printing process December 17, 2003 Thor Simon (New York, NY United States) 22 out of 22 found this review helpful
This book was conceived and executed around a specific printing process, heliogravure. The original 1933 edition, if you could find it, which would be quite a feat, would look very much like the Pantheon edition published about a decade ago, and have many of the features of the current edition that some reviewers find objectionable: matte paper, black borders, strange tonality when compared to traditionally printed work. That's why the Pantheon edition, which some of the leading figures in modern printing and photography worked on, was such a landmark, and why the cheaply printed editions between the original and that one were junk -- and gave people a very serious misapprehension of how Brassai wanted his work to look.Unfortunately, an attempt to reproduce the characteristic look of heliogravure using a more conventional printing process is a pretty tall order. If you don't like the way this edition looks, and you very well may not, see if you can find a library that has a copy of the Pantheon edition and compare them. You'll be amazed that the aspects of this edition's printing that you found objectionable actually make _that_ edition beautiful and unique. It is a shame that Amazon does not even list the Pantheon edition so that it cannot be searched for as a used book -- and that the current publisher deceptively printed an edition that looks superficially like heliogravure but is not.
Latest edition of Brassai: Paris By Night. February 17, 2002 Peter Vinten (Denmark) 8 out of 10 found this review helpful
This book is very important. Paris By Night by Brassai is a book that is central in the history of photograhy.It has been a great inspiration for many photograhers (and others). It is a shame, that this edition is very badly printed (loss of detail). I am sorry to say, that therefore the book is too exspensive. I bought the book anyway. Why? Because I wanted to have it on my shell. To study it. And because it reminds me of the first time, twenty years ago, when I saw some of the pictures from Paris By Night, and found that photograpy could be a great art.
Reproduction quality is an insult to Brassai December 16, 2001 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
One only has to compare the nicely reproduced dust jacket photo to the print of it in the book to see the amount of detail that is lost in the rest of these images. Even the thumbails in the back next to the writeups show more detail than the muddied out larger vesions in the book. Brassai's images are so great that even muddied up like this they are worth looking at, but what a shame the publisher didn't do better. Shame, shame, shame.
|
|
| Powered by Associate-O-Matic
| |