This latest volume in the MFA Highlights series showcases over 100
stunning photographs from the museum's collection. An extensive
introductory essay traces the aesthetic and technical history of
photography as an art form, from the early days of the camera obscura
through the invention of the daguerreotype and calotype and into the
present digital age. In the selection of objects that compose the body
of this beautifully designed volume, careful juxtapositions emphasize
the graphic qualities of the photos, and extended captions compare and
contrast images from different times and places, underscoring shared
techniques, sensibilities or subjects. A wide range of
photographers--from early experimenters such as Eugène Cuvelier, Charles
Marville and Anna Atkins to modern giants Alfred Stieglitz, Ansel Adams
and Edward Weston, as well as contemporary practitioners such as James
Nachtwey, Hiroshi Sugimoto and Loretta Lux--are represented by portraits
and figure studies, city scenes and still lifes, landscapes and
seascapes.