Cover

Publisher Note

An unassuming sequence of 42 medium-format photographs depicting slivers of the semirural landscape of Central Illinois.
Tim Carpenter’s Little is a visual memoir that completes a trilogy rooted in the sensibility and approach to the practice of “camera” he elaborated in the best-selling, book-length essay To Photograph Is to Learn How to Die (2022). In other words, he steadfastly upholds photography’s capacity to bridge the gap between self and other, and to cultivate meaning in an alienating world. Less formally rigorous than Local Objects (2017) and less introspective and linear than Christmas Day, Bucks Pond Road, this new installment channels the perspective of a child’s meandering mind, open to possible meanings, absorbing whatever the eyes encounter―marks, buildings, branches, paths, the daylight of a Central Illinois afternoon―nascent symbols everywhere, fleeting images improvised of mind and matter.

Adapting a style in the lineage of the New Topographics photographers―Robert Adams, John Gossage and Lewis Baltz―these black-and-white photographs are affecting in their minimalism, imbuing poignance within the banal composites of the Midwestern landscape.

Publisher
Release Place Los Angeles, California, United States of America
Edition 1st edition
Release Date 2024
Credits
Artist: Tim Carpenter
Identifiers
ISBN-13: 979-8-9857330-3-7
Work  
Topics American Landscapes, Rural Landscape
Language English
Format Hardcover
Dimensions 16.8 × 20.7 cm
Pages 88