Faking It: A Visual History of 150 Years of Image Manipulation Before Photoshop
Two-headed daguerreotypes, Dadaist photomontages, and how the subversion of optical reality got its start.
"The painter constructs, the photographer discloses," Susan Sontag famously asserted in On Photography.
But in the quarter century since, the rise of digital photography and
image manipulation software has increasingly transmogrified the
photographer into a constructor of reality, a reality in which believing is seeing. Still, image manipulation dates much further back – in fact, to the dawn of photography itself. Faking It: Manipulated Photography Before Photoshop (public library), the companion book to the Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibition
of the same title, traces the evolution of image manipulation from the
1840s to the 1990s, when computer software first began to revolutionize
the alteration of photographs.
Man on Rooftop with Eleven Men in Formation on His Shoulders (Unidentified American artist, ca. 1930)
Dirigible Docked on Empire State Building, New York (Unidentified American artist, 1930)
A Powerful Collision (Unidentified German artist, 1914)
Met curator Mia Fineman writes in the introduction:
Over the past twenty years, photography has undergone a dramatic transformation. Mechanical cameras and silver-based film have been replaced by electronic image sensors and microchips; instead of shuffling through piles of glossy prints, we stare at the glowing screens of laptops, tablets, and mobile phones; negative enlargers and chemical darkrooms have given way to personal computers and image-processing software. Digital cameras and applications such as Photoshop have create, look at, and think about photographs. Among the most profound cultural effects of these new technologies has been a heightened awareness of the malleability of the photographic image and a corresponding loss of faith in photography as an accurate, trustworthy means of representing the visual world. As viewers, we have become increasingly savvy, even habitually skeptical, about photography's claims to truth.
The Vision (Orpheus Scene) (F. Holland Day, 1907)
Lenin and Stalin in Gorki in 1922 (Unidentified Russian artist, 1949)
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec as Artist and Model (Maurice Guibert, ca. 1900)
Man Juggling His Own Head (Unidentified French artist, Published by Allain de Torbéchet et Cie. ca. 1880)
Sueño No. 1: Articulos eléctricos para el hogar / Dream No. 1: Electrical Appliances for the Home (Grete Stern, 1948)
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