Bernard Plossu, Marcos Adandía /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Plossu, Bernard, 1945-, photographer.
Edition:Primera edición.
Imprint:[Buenos Aires, Argentina] : Fundación Alfonso y Luz Castillo, Arte x Arte : Dulce equis negra, 2024.
©2024.
Description:160 pages : chiefly illustrations ; 25 cm.
Language:Spanish
French
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/13550086
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Varying Form of Title:Bernard Plossu, Marcos Adandía : conversación sin fecha
Other uniform titles:Adandía, Marcos J, 1964-,
Container of (expression) Plossu, Bernard, 1945-. Photographs. Selections.
Container of (expression) Adandía, Marcos J, 1964-. Photographs. Selections.
Other authors / contributors:Arte x Arte (Art gallery : Buenos Aires, Argentina), host institution.
Fundación Alfonso y Luz Castillo, issuing body.
ISBN:9786319027402
6319027401
Notes:Published on the occasion of the photographic exhibition held from April to June, 2024 at the Galeria Arte x Arte in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Text in Spanish and French.
Summary:At the age of 79, the Vietnam-born French photographer Bernard Plossu (1945) lives alone in his spacious and bright house in La Ciotat, a villa near Marseille, on the French Riviera. Marcos Adandía (1964) moved to Lobos, in the interior of Buenos Aires, and there, since 2005, he has edited the magazine "Dulce Equis Negra", an exponent of global photography. The French master and the Argentinian photographer shared several weeks of work where they crossed their archives, while at the same time forging a strong friendship. Plossu uses the same camera as in the 60s and, his old school gelatin silver copies were historically made by Françoise Nuñez, his life partner who died recently leaving him devastated. Since then, he has not raised his camera again. This collaboration project required Adandía to review his archive of the last 20 years, rescuing materials that he had never shown before and some others he had not looked at since they were created. "The photographs of Bernard Plossu and Marcos Adandia are linked by invisible threads that must be deciphered.".