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In 1936 Walker Evans photographed the Burroughs, a family of sharecroppers in Depression era Alabama. In 1979 in Sherrie Levine rephotographed Walker Evans' photographs from the exhibition catalog "First and Last." In 2001 Michael Mandiberg scanned these same photographs, and created AfterWalkerEvans.com and AfterSherrieLevine.com to facilitate their dissemination as a comment on how we come to know information in this burgeoning digital age.
Here on AfterWalkerEvans.com you will find a browsable selection of these images. Links to the high-resolution exhibition-quality images to download and print out. Along with a certificate of authenticity for each image, which you print out and sign yourself, as well as directions on how to frame the image so that it will fulfill the requirements of the certificate.
By building the image's URL into the title - the image to the left is "Untitled (AfterWalkerEvans.com/2.jpg)" - the images are locatable and downloadable by anyone who sees or reads about the image. By distributing the i
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3 comments:
Someone needs to correct a serious typo in the first line of the article. I don't think Walker, or the Burroughs, or even silver gelatin prints were around in 1836.
Done. Thanks. -- peter
Nice blog post
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