Silver and Glass is the first publication to explore the influence of
photography in the art of popular British artist Cornelia Parker. This
book is illustrated with over 50 works from across Parker's career: from
photo-micrographs exposing in minute detail the possessions of iconic
figures such as Einstein and Freud, through witty polaroids and phone
photographs, to large-scale sculptures that play with light and shadow,
positive and negative space. Connections between these works are
explored by Parker and celebrated historian of photography David Campany
in an insightful interview. Also included are prints inspired by
nineteenth-century photographic pioneer William Henry Fox Talbot,
created when Parker combined two of his early techniques - solar prints
and the photogravure - to create a new hybrid form by exposing
translucent three-dimensional objects to ultraviolet light. Parker's
affinity with Fox Talbot is explored in depth for the first time in
Antonia Shaw's essay.