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Word: schneiderã (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2001-2001
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Usage:

...toned silver gelatin photographic prints reveals the contours of children’s hands and mouths in all their complexity. The symmetric, proportioned limbs and lips of traditional painting give way to ethereal, x-ray-like forms, each as unique as the fingerprints they highlight. These works build on Schneider??€™s previous experiences at the intersection of science and art, in which he produced extremely detailed portraits of parts of his own body, including a hair, his teeth and a sperm, using methods ranging from electron microscopy to molecular crystallography...

Author: By Rich Worf, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: X-Rated Images: Art and Science in "Hand to Mouth" | 11/9/2001 | See Source »

...Schneider??€™s work above all asks a question of form: in what terms should we understand the parts that make up our own bodies? The children’s hands immediately call to mind the answers children themselves often give. Most basic is an outline, as those that are found in children’s coloring books. More complex is the practice of fingerpainting, which captures more of the hand’s individuality: its lines, its valleys and its asymmetry. Yet like the outline, the imprint is still a static representation, freezing a child?...

Author: By Rich Worf, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: X-Rated Images: Art and Science in "Hand to Mouth" | 11/9/2001 | See Source »

...contrast to these naïve efforts, Schneider??€™s prints capture motion. The hands and lips glow to the extent that they were pressed against the negative. Some are incandescent and pulse with life, as if trying to burst out of the glass; one from a two-year old boy sits curled and silent like a raccoon’s paw, taking up almost no space on the black matte. The life that animates each hand’s outline creates tension between the jet-black background and the dark, mottled interior with its rune-like lifelines...

Author: By Rich Worf, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: X-Rated Images: Art and Science in "Hand to Mouth" | 11/9/2001 | See Source »

...Schneider??€™s hands are a space where strange figures play. Probably very few of these children were aware that their hands contained exclamation points, pyramids, spider webs, ballet dancers or veins of gold. The charlatan photographer brings all these things to light. One can imagine a fly, with its UV vision, seeing much the same thing as it is about to be swatted. In this sense the images are very inhuman, since they require the unnatural eye of a camera to be seen...

Author: By Rich Worf, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: X-Rated Images: Art and Science in "Hand to Mouth" | 11/9/2001 | See Source »

...line of 11 identically arranged, ghost-like hands hung side by side, the landscape certainly looks bleak at first glance. Yet in another sense, these photogrpahs humanize science itself. Even reduced to its most basic components of muscle, joint and skin, no hand is remotely similar to any other. Schneider??€™s accomplishment lies in the consolation that despite even the harshest scientific conditions, the individual characteristics of the hands and lips shine through...

Author: By Rich Worf, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: X-Rated Images: Art and Science in "Hand to Mouth" | 11/9/2001 | See Source »

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