Social media isn't just changing the way we interact with each other;
it's influencing our culture and redefining what art is. Here, published
to accompany an exhibition, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art leads
the discussion about how the evolution of photography shapes the way we
view ourselves and communicate with each other through the use of social
media, thus generating new forms of artistic creation.
Snap + Share beautifully compiles the work from the SFMOMA exhibit,
spanning over 125 years and various mediums: from paper-based art to
large video screens, projections, and sculptures. By placing special
emphasis on Mail Art of the 1960s through the 1980s, this book embodies
SFMOMA's recontextualization of this diverse art movement and its
connection to the modern consumption of photography through social
media.
Showcasing work highlighting the use of photography and technology as a
means of self-expression, the book includes pieces by Joseph Beuys,
Robert Frank, Salvador Dalí, Walker Evans and Stephen Shore*,* as well
as Alain Baczynsky, Aram Beuys, Kurt Caviezel, Paul Citroen, Bill Dane,
Moyra Davey, Fortunato Depero, Jan Dibbets, Eugenio Dittborn, General
Idea, Jeff Guess, Kate Hollenbach, David Horvitz, Ray Johnson, On
Kawara, Erik Kessels, William Larson, Zoe Leonard, Eva & Franco Mattes,
Peter Miller, Jonathan Monk, Ken Ohara, Endre Tót, and Corinne Vionnet.