Lightfield: The Photography of Thaddeus Holownia
- Publisher
- Gaspereau Press Ltd.
- Initial publish date
- Oct 2018
- Category
- Canadian
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781554471775
- Publish Date
- Oct 2018
- List Price
- $24.95
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Description
This book celebrates the life and work of acclaimed New Brunswick photographer Thaddeus Holownia, former head of Fine Arts and Research Professor at Mount Allison University, and recipient of the Lieutenant-Governor’s Award for High Achievement in the Arts. As well as providing a biographical overview, Peter Sanger’s lyrical survey contextualizes Holownia’s extensive body of work, revealing how his photographs “construct, refine, vary, sustain, and share patterns of spatial structure, imagery, and thematic implication in a continuous present which is the true tense of Holownia’s art.”
About the author
Raised in Ontario, Peter Sanger (1943) was born in Worcestershire, England, and was for twenty-six years a professor at the Nova Scotia Agricultural College in Truro. An editor of The Antigonish Review, Sanger also edited John Thompson: Collected Poems and Translations (1995). He founded the Elizabeth Bishop Society of Nova Scotia. His books on poetry include SeaRun: Notes on John Thompson's "Stilt Jack" (1986) and "Her kindled shadow . . .": An Introduction to the Work of Richard Outram (2001, 2002). A collection of essays, Spar: Words in Place, was published by Gaspereau Press in 2002.
Editorial Reviews
“Holownia takes on the very difficult task of discovering the aesthetic without aestheticizing, of asserting the active power of the human apprehension of beauty rather than relegating this power to the status of passive self-solacing.”
Other titles by
Sea Run
Notes on John Thompson’s Stilt Jack
Odysseus Asleep
Uncollected Sequences, 1994-2019
The Nature of Nature
The Photographs of Thaddeus Holownia 1976-2016
Of Things Unknown
Critical Essays, 19782005
Oikos
Fireship
Early Poems, 19651991
John Stokes’ Horse
Through Darkling Air
The Poetry of Richard Outram
The Stone Canoe
Two Lost Mi’kmaq Texts