Il ritratto equestre di giovan carlo doria e palazzo spinola di pellicceria al tempo di rubens
Edited by Zanelli Gianluca.
Genova, 2023; paperback, pp. 240, b/w and col. ill., cm 17x24.
cover price: € 35.00
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Books included in the offer:
Il ritratto equestre di giovan carlo doria e palazzo spinola di pellicceria al tempo di rubens
Edited by Zanelli Gianluca.
Genova, 2023; paperback, pp. 240, b/w and col. ill., cm 17x24.
FREE (cover price: € 35.00)
Valerio Castello.
Torino, 2008; bound, pp. 301, b/w ill., 28 col. plates, cm 21,5x31.
(Archivi di Arte Antica).
FREE (cover price: € 45.00)
L'Eredità Donata. Franco e Paolo Spinola e la Galleria di Palazzo Spinola
Genova, Palazzo Spinola, February 5 - May 24, 2009.
Genova, GALLERIA NAZIONALE DI PALAZZO SPINOLA, February 6 - May 24, 2009.
Edited by Simonetti F.
Torino, 2009; paperback, pp. 149, b/w and col. ill., tavv., cm 17x22.
FREE (cover price: € 22.00)
Violent images. Negotiating images. Vol. 3
Produzioni Nero
Edited by Cordin G. and Leitolf E.
English Text.
Roma, 2025; paperback, pp. 216, col. ill., cm 16,5x24.
ISBN: 88-8056-322-X - EAN13: 9788880563228
Subject: Photography
Languages:
Weight: 1.037 kg
Many questions arise: Where does the violence in and of the image begin? What makes an image violent? Who decides this, and in what context? How do production technologies and distribution channels influence the relationship between image and (the exercise of) violence? And how do artists deal with the issue of violence and the violent potential of image technologies?
Through the lens of various disciplines, Violent Images investigates the politics of visual violence and its potential to provoke, subvert, and transform social, political, and media discourses. The artists and scholars invited to contribute to this image-text publication discuss "The Whiteness of Silicon Valley's Digital Ecologies" (Stephanie Polsky); "Gender and Violence in News Media and Photography" (Roland Bleiker and Emma Hutchison); transgressive image-making practices (Monica M. Haller), and more. All the contributors critically examine established and emerging visual concepts of violence, suggesting that our engagement with them is inherently political and more pressing than ever.
Continuing Giulia Cordin and Eva Leitolf's exploration begun with Landscape with(out) Locus, Violent Images explores the intricate relationship between visual culture and the social and economic conditions that influence and are influenced by it. It illustrates the need for a more critical and engaged approach to visual representation and communication in the context of local and global conflicts and crises.









