Contents:
La imitacin es fundamental (el traje, adicional).

'La imitacin es fundamental (el traje adicional)', from *Los Caprichos* (palladium print, 2012) Sheila Newbery
From Los Caprichos, an artists book in the making. Its titled after Francisco Jos de Goya y Lucientes well known album of eighty aquatints, which the artist published in 1799, after a debilitating illness.
Caprichos means literally: whims. Images from this series are photographed from video source on a 45 Crown Graphic press camera and printed in platinum-palladium (a traditional process) on Bergger paper (Cot 320).
In keeping with the spirit of Goyas sharp-edged commentary, Ive given each of the images a caption in Spanish.

Hold your breath

Surface light, no. 3 (2012) Sheila Newbery

At the surface (2012) Sheila Newbery

Diverse divers

Coming up for air, no. 1 (2012) Sheila Newbery

Surface light (2012) Sheila Newbery

Coming up for air, no. 3 (2012) Sheila Newbery

Going down (2012) Sheila Newbery

Surface light, no. 2 (2012) Sheila Newbery

Despus de la revelacin

Despus de la revelacin from *Los Caprichos: after Goya* (palladium print, 2011) Sheila Newbery
From Los Caprichos, an artists book in the making. Its titled after Francisco Jos de Goya y Lucientes well known album of eighty aquatints, which the artist published in 1799, after a debilitating illness.
Caprichos means literally: whims. Images from this series are photographed from video source on a 45 Crown Graphic press camera and printed in platinum-palladium (a traditional process) on Bergger paper (Cot 320).
In keeping with the spirit of Goyas sharp-edged commentary, Ive given each of the images a caption in Spanish.

No dejes que te devore

No dejes que te devore (palladium print, 2011) Sheila Newbery
From Los Caprichos, an artists book in the making. Its titled after Francisco Jos de Goya y Lucientes well known album of eighty aquatints, which the artist published in 1799 after a debilitating illness.
‘Caprichos’ means literally: whims. Images from this series are photographed from video source on a 45 Crown Graphic press camera and printed in platinum-palladium (a traditional process) on Bergger paper (Cot 320).
In keeping with the spirit of Goyas sharp-edged commentary, Ive given each of the images a caption in Spanish.

Dialogue between lens and brush
Joan Semmel: With Camera (2001–2006)

Happy New Year 2012

'American couples dancing the foreign polka' (detail)
Above: “American couples danced the foreign polka with gusto in 1848, to show their sympathy with the revolutionaries in Europe.” From The American Past by Roger Butterfield (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1947), p. 124.
To the 17 million Americans of the 1840′s politics was by no means all-important. Only a small number took seriously the elections and the debates in Congress. Nor did they worry about such things as wars. “The world has become stale and insipid,” cried a respectable New York newspaper in 1845, “the ships ought to be all captured, and the cities battered down, and the world burned up, so that we can start again. There would be fun in that.”
(…)
They were bursting with energy and self-esteem, these Americans of the forties, and they felt that their future was bright despite anything the politicians might—or might not—do. (Butterfield, pp. 124–125).

No te olvides de tu cara

"No te olvides de tu cara" (palladium print, 2011) Sheila Newbery
From Los Caprichos, an artists book in the making. Its titled after Francisco Jos de Goya y Lucientes well known album of eighty aquatints, which the artist published in 1799 after a debilitating illness.
Caprichos means literally: whims. Images from this series are photographed from video source on a 45 Crown Graphic press camera and printed in platinum-palladium (a traditional process) on Bergger paper.
In keeping with the spirit of Goyas sharp-edged commentary, Ive given each of the images a caption in Spanish.

An ms grande

"An ms grande" (4 x 5 in. palladium print, 2011)
From Los Caprichos, an artists book in the making. Its titled after Francisco Jos de Goya y Lucientes well known album of eighty aquatints, which the artist published in 1799 after a debilitating illness.
Caprichos means literally: whims. Each image focuses on some aspect of contemporary life. I start with a digital capture from a video source; rephotograph the image on an old 45 Crown Graphic press camera; and print it in platinum-palladium (a traditional process) on Bergger paper.
In keeping with the spirit of Goyas sharp-edged commentary, Ive given each of the images a caption in Spanish.
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