During the past decade digital transformation has directly or indirectly inspired the development of new study programmes at the Lucerne School of Art and Design. Encouraging digital competence and reflecting on the creative and societal implications of technological change are now key aims of our institution. Post-photography emerged as a central topic in that process. But what exactly do we mean when we use the term? Is it photography for the electronic age, where digital technology transforms, intensifies and expands photography, or does it include all self-interrogation of photographic practices? Does it imply the dominance of metadata over the experience of the image? Is it image or information?
Is there any intrinsic link between the post-photographic and post-truth? Do we need new concepts for visual literacy? Post-photography has been evoked to address a growing range of phenomena. It remains equivocal and will often leave us confused; there’s too much in the term ‹post-photo- graphy› and too little. But that’s not so bad after all. In fact, that’s how we like it. This publication maps social, political and aesthetic perspectives on post-photography that have gained ground in various working contexts at our institution and in the related art and design activities of our school.
Issue Editors
Wolfgang Brückle and Salvatore Vitale
114 pages, May 2021
ISBN 978-3-033-08491-9
Language: English
Price: CHF 10
Shipping costs (1 copy): CHF 5 (Switzerland), CHF 18 (Europe), CHF 30 – 45 (overseas)