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LEBENDE SCHREINE UIGURISCHEN CHINAS: FOTOS VON LISA ROSS - Hardcover *TOP*
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eBay-Artikelnr.:335352988486
Artikelmerkmale
- Artikelzustand
- Sehr gut
- Hinweise des Verkäufers
- ISBN-10
- 1580933505
- Publication Name
- The Monacelli Press
- Type
- Hardcover
- ISBN
- 9781580933506
- Book Title
- Living Shrines of Uyghur China : Photographs by Lisa Ross
- Item Length
- 10.2in
- Publisher
- Monacelli Press, Incorporated
- Publication Year
- 2013
- Format
- Hardcover
- Language
- English
- Item Height
- 1.5in
- Genre
- Photography, Travel, Religion
- Topic
- Subjects & Themes / Regional (See Also Travel / Pictorials), Individual Photographers / General, Islam / General, Asia / China
- Item Width
- 10in
- Item Weight
- 35.1 Oz
- Number of Pages
- 128 Pages
Über dieses Produkt
Product Information
Art photographs of strikingly beautiful and austere shrines of saints and pilgrimage sites erected by the Uyghurs (a mystic, pacifistic branch of Islam) in the deserts of Western China that are threatened by that country's rapid development will appeal to all interested in art, Central Asia, and Chinese or Islamic culture.
Product Identifiers
Publisher
Monacelli Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10
1580933505
ISBN-13
9781580933506
eBay Product ID (ePID)
117191410
Product Key Features
Book Title
Living Shrines of Uyghur China : Photographs by Lisa Ross
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Topic
Subjects & Themes / Regional (See Also Travel / Pictorials), Individual Photographers / General, Islam / General, Asia / China
Publication Year
2013
Genre
Photography, Travel, Religion
Number of Pages
128 Pages
Dimensions
Item Length
10.2in
Item Height
1.5in
Item Width
10in
Item Weight
35.1 Oz
Additional Product Features
Lc Classification Number
Bp187.55.C62x565
Reviews
"Ms. Ross returned repeatedly to the Xinjiang region of far western China, accompanied by an Uyghur folklorist, Rahile Dawut, and a French historian of Central Asia, Alexandre Papas. Both have contributed essays to Ms. Ross's recently published book of photographs of the shrines. And a selection of pictures from the book makes up the small exhibition, organized by Beth Citron, at the Rubin Museum of Art. With its expanses of pale earth and wide sky framing wind-whipped Uyghur forms, the show is a heart lifter, confirming the idea that belief is, and always has been, a wellspring of visual invention, and that evanescence has an aesthetic all its own." -- The New York Times "Lisa Ross's luminous photographs are not our usual images of Xinjiang. One of China's most turbulent areas, the huge autonomous region in the country's northwest was brought under permanent Chinese control only in the mid-twentieth century. Officially, it is populated mostly by non-ethnic Chinese--Turkic peoples like Uighurs (also spelled Uyghurs), Kazakhs, and Kyrgyz, as well as Mongolians and even Russians--and its population has long had difficult relations with Beijing. In 2008, 2009, and 2012, Xinjiang was the site of bloody protests. Instead of representing these political conflicts, however, Ross's photographs are unassuming and quiet; people are never present and the objects she captures--stone on sand, cloth on stone, the skeleton of a dried animal--have an incandescent glow, as if lit by another sun. In fact, these images reveal a little-known religious tradition in Xinjiang--its desert shrines to Sufi saints. Taken in the Xinjiang's Taklamakan Desert, they are collected in Ross's addictive new book Living Shrines of Uyghur China." -- New York Review of Books "Lisa Ross is a hunter and gatherer of rare grace. With the patience and resolve of a true pilgrim, she travels to impossible places and captures ephemeral notions (such as prayer, history, isolation, migration, hope, grief, longing, etc.). These notions, she transforms with a quiet alchemy into photographs that inhabit the viewer's mind and soul forever. Quite simply, my admiration for this work has no bounds." --Elizabeth Gilbert, author of Eat, Pray, Love "An awareness of transience lies at the heart of all devotion, and it finds an apt emblem in these grave markers, bent and tattered by the wind . . . In time, and not much time, [modernization] could transform Ms. Ross's exquisite anthropological images of living monuments into documents of relics." --Holland Cotter, The New York Times "I have an obsession with saints and the desert, things that are bigger than we are. When I first saw Lisa's work I was moved by the colors and beauty of the imagery, and learning where they were made and what concerned her made me even more impressed by their silence and serenity. Lisa found a place and really found a way to find herself in that place." --Nan Goldin, "Lisa Ross is a hunter and gatherer of rare grace. With the patience and resolve of a true pilgrim, she travels to impossible places and captures ephemeral notions (such as prayer, history, isolation, migration, hope, grief, longing, etc.). These notions, she transforms with a quiet alchemy into photographs that inhabit the viewer's mind and soul forever. Quite simply, my admiration for this work has no bounds." -Elizabeth Gilbert, author of Eat, Pray, Love "An awareness of transience lies at the heart of all devotion, and it finds an apt emblem in these grave markers, bent and tattered by the wind . . . In time, and not much time, [modernization] could transform Ms. Ross's exquisite anthropological images of living monuments into documents of relics." -Holland Cotter, The New York Times "I have an obsession with saints and the desert, things that are bigger than we are. When I first saw Lisa's work I was moved by the colors and beauty of the imagery, and learning where they were made and what concerned her made me even more impressed by their silence and serenity. Lisa found a place and really found a way to find herself in that place." -Nan Goldin, "Lisa Ross's luminous photographs are not our usual images of Xinjiang. One of China's most turbulent areas, the huge autonomous region in the country's northwest was brought under permanent Chinese control only in the mid-twentieth century. Officially, it is populated mostly by non-ethnic Chinese-Turkic peoples like Uighurs (also spelled Uyghurs), Kazakhs, and Kyrgyz, as well as Mongolians and even Russians-and its population has long had difficult relations with Beijing. In 2008, 2009, and 2012, Xinjiang was the site of bloody protests. Instead of representing these political conflicts, however, Ross's photographs are unassuming and quiet; people are never present and the objects she captures-stone on sand, cloth on stone, the skeleton of a dried animal-have an incandescent glow, as if lit by another sun. In fact, these images reveal a little-known religious tradition in Xinjiang-its desert shrines to Sufi saints. Taken in the Xinjiang's Taklamakan Desert, they are collected in Ross's addictive new book Living Shrines of Uyghur China ." - New York Review of Books "Lisa Ross is a hunter and gatherer of rare grace. With the patience and resolve of a true pilgrim, she travels to impossible places and captures ephemeral notions (such as prayer, history, isolation, migration, hope, grief, longing, etc.). These notions, she transforms with a quiet alchemy into photographs that inhabit the viewer's mind and soul forever. Quite simply, my admiration for this work has no bounds." -Elizabeth Gilbert, author of Eat, Pray, Love "An awareness of transience lies at the heart of all devotion, and it finds an apt emblem in these grave markers, bent and tattered by the wind . . . In time, and not much time, [modernization] could transform Ms. Ross's exquisite anthropological images of living monuments into documents of relics." -Holland Cotter, The New York Times "I have an obsession with saints and the desert, things that are bigger than we are. When I first saw Lisa's work I was moved by the colors and beauty of the imagery, and learning where they were made and what concerned her made me even more impressed by their silence and serenity. Lisa found a place and really found a way to find herself in that place." -Nan Goldin, "Lisa Ross is a hunter and gatherer of rare grace. With the patience and resolve of a true pilgrim, she travels to impossible places and captures ephemeral notions (such as prayer, history, isolation, migration, hope, grief, longing, etc.). These notions, she transforms with a quiet alchemy into photographs that inhabit the viewer's mind and soul forever. Quite simply, my admiration for this work has no bounds." -Elizabeth Gilbert, author of Eat, Pray, Love, "Ms. Ross returned repeatedly to the Xinjiang region of far western China, accompanied by an Uyghur folklorist, Rahile Dawut, and a French historian of Central Asia, Alexandre Papas. Both have contributed essays to Ms. Ross's recently published book of photographs of the shrines. And a selection of pictures from the book makes up the small exhibition, organized by Beth Citron, at the Rubin Museum of Art. With its expanses of pale earth and wide sky framing wind-whipped Uyghur forms, the show is a heart lifter, confirming the idea that belief is, and always has been, a wellspring of visual invention, and that evanescence has an aesthetic all its own." - The New York Times "Lisa Ross's luminous photographs are not our usual images of Xinjiang. One of China's most turbulent areas, the huge autonomous region in the country's northwest was brought under permanent Chinese control only in the mid-twentieth century. Officially, it is populated mostly by non-ethnic Chinese-Turkic peoples like Uighurs (also spelled Uyghurs), Kazakhs, and Kyrgyz, as well as Mongolians and even Russians-and its population has long had difficult relations with Beijing. In 2008, 2009, and 2012, Xinjiang was the site of bloody protests. Instead of representing these political conflicts, however, Ross's photographs are unassuming and quiet; people are never present and the objects she captures-stone on sand, cloth on stone, the skeleton of a dried animal-have an incandescent glow, as if lit by another sun. In fact, these images reveal a little-known religious tradition in Xinjiang-its desert shrines to Sufi saints. Taken in the Xinjiang's Taklamakan Desert, they are collected in Ross's addictive new book Living Shrines of Uyghur China ." - New York Review of Books "Lisa Ross is a hunter and gatherer of rare grace. With the patience and resolve of a true pilgrim, she travels to impossible places and captures ephemeral notions (such as prayer, history, isolation, migration, hope, grief, longing, etc.). These notions, she transforms with a quiet alchemy into photographs that inhabit the viewer's mind and soul forever. Quite simply, my admiration for this work has no bounds." -Elizabeth Gilbert, author of Eat, Pray, Love "An awareness of transience lies at the heart of all devotion, and it finds an apt emblem in these grave markers, bent and tattered by the wind . . . In time, and not much time, [modernization] could transform Ms. Ross's exquisite anthropological images of living monuments into documents of relics." -Holland Cotter, The New York Times "I have an obsession with saints and the desert, things that are bigger than we are. When I first saw Lisa's work I was moved by the colors and beauty of the imagery, and learning where they were made and what concerned her made me even more impressed by their silence and serenity. Lisa found a place and really found a way to find herself in that place." -Nan Goldin, "Ms. Ross returned repeatedly to the Xinjiang region of far western China, accompanied by an Uyghur folklorist, Rahile Dawut, and a French historian of Central Asia, Alexandre Papas. Both have contributed essays to Ms. Ross's recently published book of photographs of the shrines. And a selection of pictures from the book makes up the small exhibition, organized by Beth Citron, at the Rubin Museum of Art. With its expanses of pale earth and wide sky framing wind-whipped Uyghur forms, the show is a heart lifter, confirming the idea that belief is, and always has been, a wellspring of visual invention, and that evanescence has an aesthetic all its own." -- The New York Times "Lisa Ross's luminous photographs are not our usual images of Xinjiang. One of China's most turbulent areas, the huge autonomous region in the country's northwest was brought under permanent Chinese control only in the mid-twentieth century. Officially, it is populated mostly by non-ethnic Chinese--Turkic peoples like Uighurs (also spelled Uyghurs), Kazakhs, and Kyrgyz, as well as Mongolians and even Russians--and its population has long had difficult relations with Beijing. In 2008, 2009, and 2012, Xinjiang was the site of bloody protests. Instead of representing these political conflicts, however, Ross's photographs are unassuming and quiet; people are never present and the objects she captures--stone on sand, cloth on stone, the skeleton of a dried animal--have an incandescent glow, as if lit by another sun. In fact, these images reveal a little-known religious tradition in Xinjiang--its desert shrines to Sufi saints. Taken in the Xinjiang's Taklamakan Desert, they are collected in Ross's addictive new book Living Shrines of Uyghur China ." -- New York Review of Books "Lisa Ross is a hunter and gatherer of rare grace. With the patience and resolve of a true pilgrim, she travels to impossible places and captures ephemeral notions (such as prayer, history, isolation, migration, hope, grief, longing, etc.). These notions, she transforms with a quiet alchemy into photographs that inhabit the viewer's mind and soul forever. Quite simply, my admiration for this work has no bounds." --Elizabeth Gilbert, author of Eat, Pray, Love "An awareness of transience lies at the heart of all devotion, and it finds an apt emblem in these grave markers, bent and tattered by the wind . . . In time, and not much time, [modernization] could transform Ms. Ross's exquisite anthropological images of living monuments into documents of relics." --Holland Cotter, The New York Times "I have an obsession with saints and the desert, things that are bigger than we are. When I first saw Lisa's work I was moved by the colors and beauty of the imagery, and learning where they were made and what concerned her made me even more impressed by their silence and serenity. Lisa found a place and really found a way to find herself in that place." --Nan Goldin, "Ms. Ross returned repeatedly to the Xinjiang region of far western China, accompanied by an Uyghur folklorist, Rahile Dawut, and a French historian of Central Asia, Alexandre Papas. Both have contributed essays to Ms. Ross's recently published book of photographs of the shrines. And a selection of pictures from the book makes up the small exhibition, organized by Beth Citron, at the Rubin Museum of Art. With its expanses of pale earth and wide sky framing wind-whipped Uyghur forms, the show is a heart lifter, confirming the idea that belief is, and always has been, a wellspring of visual invention, and that evanescence has an aesthetic all its own." --The New York Times "Lisa Ross's luminous photographs are not our usual images of Xinjiang. One of China's most turbulent areas, the huge autonomous region in the country's northwest was brought under permanent Chinese control only in the mid-twentieth century. Officially, it is populated mostly by non-ethnic Chinese--Turkic peoples like Uighurs (also spelled Uyghurs), Kazakhs, and Kyrgyz, as well as Mongolians and even Russians--and its population has long had difficult relations with Beijing. In 2008, 2009, and 2012, Xinjiang was the site of bloody protests. Instead of representing these political conflicts, however, Ross's photographs are unassuming and quiet; people are never present and the objects she captures--stone on sand, cloth on stone, the skeleton of a dried animal--have an incandescent glow, as if lit by another sun. In fact, these images reveal a little-known religious tradition in Xinjiang--its desert shrines to Sufi saints. Taken in the Xinjiang's Taklamakan Desert, they are collected in Ross's addictive new book Living Shrines of Uyghur China." --New York Review of Books "Lisa Ross is a hunter and gatherer of rare grace. With the patience and resolve of a true pilgrim, she travels to impossible places and captures ephemeral notions (such as prayer, history, isolation, migration, hope, grief, longing, etc.). These notions, she transforms with a quiet alchemy into photographs that inhabit the viewer's mind and soul forever. Quite simply, my admiration for this work has no bounds." --Elizabeth Gilbert, author of Eat, Pray, Love "An awareness of transience lies at the heart of all devotion, and it finds an apt emblem in these grave markers, bent and tattered by the wind . . . In time, and not much time, [modernization] could transform Ms. Ross's exquisite anthropological images of living monuments into documents of relics." --Holland Cotter, The New York Times "I have an obsession with saints and the desert, things that are bigger than we are. When I first saw Lisa's work I was moved by the colors and beauty of the imagery, and learning where they were made and what concerned her made me even more impressed by their silence and serenity. Lisa found a place and really found a way to find herself in that place." --Nan Goldin
Copyright Date
2013
Lccn
2012-035784
Dewey Decimal
297.3/5516
Intended Audience
Trade
Dewey Edition
23
Illustrated
Yes
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