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The Day in Its Color: Charles Cushman's Photographic Journey Through a Vanishing
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The Day in Its Color: Charles Cushman's Photographic Journey Through a Vanishing America Hardcover - 2012 - 1st Edition

by Eric Sandweiss

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Oxford University Press, USA, 2012-02-28. Hardcover. Used:Good.
Used:Good
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Details

  • Title The Day in Its Color: Charles Cushman's Photographic Journey Through a Vanishing America
  • Author Eric Sandweiss
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Edition number 1st
  • Edition 1
  • Condition Used:Good
  • Pages 240
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Oxford University Press, USA, New York
  • Date 2012-02-28
  • Illustrated Yes
  • Features Bibliography, Dust Cover, Illustrated, Index, Table of Contents
  • Bookseller's Inventory # DADAX0199772339
  • ISBN 9780199772339 / 0199772339
  • Weight 1.75 lbs (0.79 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.1 x 7.2 x 0.9 in (23.11 x 18.29 x 2.29 cm)
  • Themes
    • Chronological Period: 20th Century
  • Library of Congress subjects United States, United States - History - 20th century
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2011002845
  • Dewey Decimal Code B

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From the publisher

Charles Cushman (1896-1972) photographed a disappearing world in living color. Cushman's midcentury America--a place normally seen only through a scrim of gray--reveals itself as a place as vivid and real as the view through our window.

The Day in Its Color introduces readers to Cushman's extraordinary work, a recently unearthed archive of photographs that is the largest known body of early color photographs by a single photographer, 14,500 in all, most shot on vivid, color-saturated Kodachrome stock. From 1938-1969, Cushman--a sometime businessman and amateur photographer with an uncanny eye for everyday detail--travelled constantly, shooting everything he encountered as he ventured from New York to New Orleans, Chicago to San Francisco, and everywhere in between. His photos include portraits, ethnographic studies, agricultural and industrial landscapes, movie sets and media events, children playing, laborers working, and thousands of street scenes, all precisely documented in time and place. The result is a chronicle of an era almost never seen, or even envisioned, in color.

This well-preserved collection is all the more remarkable for having gone undiscovered for decades. What makes the photos most valuable, however, is the wide range of subjects, landscapes, and moods it captures--snapshots of a lost America as yet untouched by a homogenizing overlay of interstate highways, urban renewal, chain stores, and suburban development--a world of hand-painted signs, state fairs, ramshackle shops, small town living and bustling urban scenes. The book also reveals the fascinating and startling life story of the man who stood, unseen, on the other side of the lens, surely one of America's most impressive amateur photographers and outsider artists.

With over 150 gorgeous color prints, The Day in Its Color gives us one of the most evocative visual histories of mid-20th century America that we have.

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Citations

  • Library Journal, 06/15/2012, Page 76

About the author

Eric Sandweiss is Carmony Associate Professor of History at Indiana University. He is the co-author of Eadweard Muybridge and the Photographic Panorama of San Francisco (winner of Western History Association's Kerr prize for best illustrated book) and author of St. Louis: The Evolution of an American Urban Landscape.