Wherever there have been nuclear weapons and nuclear fission, there have also been cameras. Camera Atomica explores the intimate relationship between photography and nuclear events, to uncover how the camera lens has shaped public perceptions of the atomic age and its anxieties. Co-published to coincide with a major exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ontario in 2014. Photographs have a crucial place in the representation of the atomic age and its anxieties. Camera Atomica examines narratives beyond the "technological sublime" that dominates much nuclear photography, suppressing representations of the human form in favour of representations of B-52 bombers and mushroom clouds. The book proposes that the body is the site where the social enviro...
Questions of visibility, witnessing, and agency are particularly pertinent to post-1945 US and Frenc...
The brief explorations of radiation exposures presented within this essay draw primarily from nuclea...
Keiji’s Nakazawa’s firsthand witness, a 48-page graphic memoir I Saw It (1972), responds to the mech...
This article charts a media historical relation between radiation and celluloid film, ranging from t...
Catalogue published to accompany an exhibition composed of 77 photographs by 13 members of the Atomi...
How have nuclear issues been covered in documentary since the end of the Cold War? This original new...
Since the detonation of the Trinity Test in July 1945, the scientific and cultural consequences of w...
Solo exhibition of C-type prints, examining our visual and cultural relationship to the atom bomb.Th...
This dissertation investigates the visual legacy of the atomic bomb as viewed through the eyes of a ...
From 2005 until 2007, Canadian photographer Donald Weber spent time aroundthe Chernobyl region in Uk...
From 2005 until 2007, Canadian photographer Donald Weber spent time aroundthe Chernobyl region in Uk...
Working with the nuclear economy and nuclear aesthetics is a complex ethical process, one that twist...
This artwork is in response to the 25th anniversary of the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster. The grea...
The predominant existential and political issues surrounding the ‘nuclear’ are no longer focused on ...
Questions of visibility, witnessing, and agency are particularly pertinent to post-1945 US and Frenc...
Questions of visibility, witnessing, and agency are particularly pertinent to post-1945 US and Frenc...
The brief explorations of radiation exposures presented within this essay draw primarily from nuclea...
Keiji’s Nakazawa’s firsthand witness, a 48-page graphic memoir I Saw It (1972), responds to the mech...
This article charts a media historical relation between radiation and celluloid film, ranging from t...
Catalogue published to accompany an exhibition composed of 77 photographs by 13 members of the Atomi...
How have nuclear issues been covered in documentary since the end of the Cold War? This original new...
Since the detonation of the Trinity Test in July 1945, the scientific and cultural consequences of w...
Solo exhibition of C-type prints, examining our visual and cultural relationship to the atom bomb.Th...
This dissertation investigates the visual legacy of the atomic bomb as viewed through the eyes of a ...
From 2005 until 2007, Canadian photographer Donald Weber spent time aroundthe Chernobyl region in Uk...
From 2005 until 2007, Canadian photographer Donald Weber spent time aroundthe Chernobyl region in Uk...
Working with the nuclear economy and nuclear aesthetics is a complex ethical process, one that twist...
This artwork is in response to the 25th anniversary of the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster. The grea...
The predominant existential and political issues surrounding the ‘nuclear’ are no longer focused on ...
Questions of visibility, witnessing, and agency are particularly pertinent to post-1945 US and Frenc...
Questions of visibility, witnessing, and agency are particularly pertinent to post-1945 US and Frenc...
The brief explorations of radiation exposures presented within this essay draw primarily from nuclea...
Keiji’s Nakazawa’s firsthand witness, a 48-page graphic memoir I Saw It (1972), responds to the mech...