Infra
Richard Mosse
| CONDITION & NOTES | |
| Used – Good / Dust jacket is in worn condition. It has surface scratching and obvious edge wear but is complete. The book itself has slight spotting on the top of the book block, and a sticker from a previous bookstore on the verso of the rear cover (under the dust jacket flap). Interior is in Good – Very Good condition. Signed by Mosse in black marker on the title page. |
|
| TYPE | PUBLICATION YEAR |
| Hardcover |
2012 |
| EDITION | LANGUAGE |
| First |
English |
| PUBLISHER | DIMENSIONS |
| Aperture | 27 x 24 x 2 cm |
Used – Good / Dust jacket is in worn condition. It has surface scratching and obvious edge wear but is complete. The book itself has slight spotting on the top of the book block, and a sticker from a previous bookstore on the verso of the rear cover (under the dust jacket flap). Interior is in Good – Very Good condition. Signed by Mosse in black marker on the title page.
TYPE
Hardcover
PUBLICATION YEAR
2012
EDITION
First
LANGUAGE
English
PUBLISHER
Aperture
DIMENSIONS
27 x 24 x 2 cm
ABOUT
Infra, Richard Mosse's first book, offers a radical rethinking of how to depict a conflict as complex and intractable as that of the ongoing war in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Mosse photographs both the rich topography, inscribed with the traces of conflicting interests, as well as rebel groups of constantly shifting allegiances at war with the Congolese national army (itself a patchwork of recently integrated warlords and their militias). For centuries, the Congo has repeatedly compelled and defied the western imagination. Mosse brings to this subject the use of a discontinued aerial surveillance film, a type of color infrared film called Kodak Aerochrome. The film, originally developed for military reconnaissance, registers an invisible spectrum of infrared light, rendering the green landscape in vivid hues of lavender, crimson and hot pink. The results offer a fevered inflation of the traditional reportage document, underlining the growing tension between art, fiction and photojournalism. Mosse's work highlights the ineffable nature of current events in today's Congo. Infra initiates a dialogue with photography that begins as an intoxicating meditation on a broken genre, but ends as a haunting elegy for a vividly beautiful land touched by unspeakable tragedy.