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Lyle Gomes - Imagining Eden: Connecting Landscapes - 9780813923826 - V9780813923826
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Imagining Eden: Connecting Landscapes

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Description for Imagining Eden: Connecting Landscapes hardcover. What did Eden look like? The photographer Lyle Gomes observes landscapes that represent the idea of locus amoenus - the pleasant place. The tradition of locus amoenus goes back to the idyllic descriptions of fictional locations, often called Arcadia, in the writings of Sappho, Apollonius, and Virgil, in the imagined period of the Golden Age. Num Pages: 96 pages, 60 duotone photographs. BIC Classification: AGN; AJB; AJC. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 191 x 279 x 15. Weight in Grams: 640.
What did Eden look like? In ""Imagining Eden"" the photographer Lyle Gomes observes landscapes that represent the idea of locus amoenus - the pleasant place. The tradition of locus amoenus goes back to the idyllic descriptions of fictional locations, often called Arcadia, in the writings of Sappho, Apollonius, and Virgil, in the imagined period of the Golden Age. We also recognize this concept in Eden, of course, where it suggests a loss that still haunts our imaginations. It is an idea distinctly different from that of wilderness, for we feel protected in these places - even provided for, though there is no sign of toil. The chance that this Eden might somehow be regained gives the concept its consolatory power. For fifteen years, Gomes has traveled across America and Europe to find examples of this enduring ideal of place in parks, English gardens, even golf courses. Gomes's search took him to Mount Auburn cemetery, Central Park, Monticello, the San Francisco Presidio, villa gardens near Italy's Lake Como, Melbourne Hall in Derbyshire, and private gardens such as Biltmore and Dumbarton Oaks. ""Imagining Eden"" includes an eloquent introductory essay in which the landcape historian Denis Cosgrove explores how the concept of the locus amoenus relates to Gomes's work, and the photographs are accompanied by an evocative selection of quotes by the various settings' designers and by inspired observers. The book concludes with an extensive interview in which Gomes discusses he balances craft and inspiration, the role of research in preparing a shoot, preference for black-and-white over color (""I was completely, and immediately enamored with the silver image""), and a sense of discovery as a chief motivation in all his work.

Product Details

Format
Hardback
Publication date
2005
Publisher
University of Virginia Press United States
Number of pages
96
Condition
New
Number of Pages
96
Place of Publication
Charlottesville, United States
ISBN
9780813923826
SKU
V9780813923826
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-1

About Lyle Gomes
Lyle Gomes is Professor of Photography at the College of San Mateo. His work has appeared in publications such as Places and See: A Journal of Visual Culture as well as in numerous exhibits and is part of the permanent colletcion of museums throughout the United States and Europe. Denis Cosgrove Alexander von Humboldt Professor of Geography at UCLA and author of Apollo's Eye: A Cartographic Genealogy of the Earth in the Western Imagination. Karen Sinsheimer is Curator of Photography at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

Reviews for Imagining Eden: Connecting Landscapes
Because Eden's genius resides in imagination, it is a mobile spirit, always found in place but never confined by place. The spirit of Eden migrates within us, animated through our imaginative responses to actual places in the material world, in our roles as gardeners and poets, painters and photographers. - from the introduction

Goodreads reviews for Imagining Eden: Connecting Landscapes


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