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HomeContentsPhotobooks > Book Details
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Michael Wolf: Sitting in China 
 
  
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Product Details 
  
 
Hardback 
160 pages 
Steidl 
Published 2002 
  
"Bound in red with a red slip cover marked with black Chinese letters it fairly glows with promise. Inside, the images transcend the ordinariness of their subject through the photographer's skill ad his attention to detail, texture, color and pattern. In short, Wolf accomplishes for makeshift Chinese chairs what other photographer's before him have done for the doors of San Miguel and sun-drenched walls of the Mediterranean-he's turned them into art."--Contents Magazine
 
They are not elegant, nor are they always comfortable. But neither are they mass-produced: they are individuals. In China, the objects used for sitting are as manifold as the occasions for sitting. Each chair and stool has its own character, is a companion, a bastard, or a venerable elder. Their occupants sit close to the floor, introspective, watching the world go by, without the pressure of time. But a photographer trying to document such a scene quickly becomes the focus of attention: people passing by wonder what is going on; the person on the chair assumes a pose, though the intent was to catch him or her unawares. Michael Wolf's photographs document the beauty of the ugly, the stretching of time, the art of improvisation, and the nature of the stool as a portrait of its user. Sometimes, a photographed chair was immediately confiscated by its owner: having lost its anonymity by being singled out as a photographically noteworthy object, it became an object of embarrassment, too shoddy to come once again into the camera's viewfinder.
 
  
 
 
  
 
  
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