Carol Mavor es profesora de Historia del Arte y Estudios Visuales cuyo trabajo profundiza en el rico panorama de la cultura visual y la fotografía. Su escritura es celebrada por su profunda exploración de los significados ocultos dentro de las imágenes y su profunda conexión con la emoción, la memoria y la identidad. Mavor se acerca a los materiales visuales con una sensibilidad literaria, descubriendo narrativas sutiles y conexiones sorprendentes que enriquecen nuestra comprensión del mundo. Sus análisis ofrecen a los lectores una nueva perspectiva sobre el arte y la comunicación visual.
Drawing attention to the interplay between writing and vision, this book is
stuffed with more than 200 images. It is a meditation on the threads that
unite mothers and sons and the ways that certain writers and photographers
take up those threads and create art that captures an irretrievable past.
Postwar French works that register disturbing truths about loss and regret,
and violence and history, through aesthetic refinement anchor this exquisite,
image-filled rumination on efforts to capture fleeting moments and comprehend
the incomprehensible.
"A contemplative and lyrical memoir of early childhood, inheritance and loss. Carol Mavor blends encounters with the works of Piero della Francesca and Brueghel, Goya and Mann, alongside a synesthetic immersion in pre-linguistic memory. It is a scholarly and intimate look at grief and reparation, imagination and forgiveness, told by one of the most interesting and genre-defying essayists."--back cover
The sea, the sky, the veins of your hands, the earth when photographed from space--blue sometimes seems to overwhelm all the other shades of our world in its all-encompassing presence. The blues of Blue Mythologies include those present in the world's religions, eggs, science, slavery, gender, sex, art, the literary past, and contemporary film. Carol Mavor's engaging and elegiac readings in this beautifully illustrated book take the reader from the blue of a newborn baby's eyes to Giotto's frescoes at Padua, and from the films of Derek Jarman and Krzysztof Ki slowski to the islands of Venice and Aran. In each example Mavor unpicks meaning both above and below the surface of culture. In an echo of Roland Barthes's essays in Mythologies, blue is unleashed as our most familiar and most paradoxical color. At once historical, sociological, literary, and visual, Blue Mythologies gives us a fresh and contemplative look into the traditions, tales, and connotations of those somethings blue.