Strange Hours: Photography, Memory, and the Lives of Artists
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In Strange Hours: Photography, Memory, and the Lives of Artists, Rebecca Bengal considers the photographers who have defined our relationship to the medium.
Format: Paperback / softback
Number of pages: 216
Number of images: 25
Publication date: 2023-06-27
Measurements: 5.25 x 8.25 x .8 inches
ISBN: 9781597115544
“In this collection of thoughtful and elegant essays, Bengal, writes about pictures and picture makers but also about the history of the medium over the course of the last half a century.”—Robert Sullivan, Vogue
“In each piece, there is a free-flowing association between photography and literature, music, poetry, memory, and rediscovery.”—Keziah Weir, Vanity Fair
“Besides being a tidy time capsule, Strange Hours serves a crash course in the enormity and importance of photography. It plunges quickly beneath the surface to reveal just how deep the image can go.”—Kat Herriman, Cultured
Rebecca Bengal is a writer of fiction, essays, and documentary journalism about art, literature, film, music, and the environment. A regular contributor to Aperture, her writing has been published by the Paris Review, Vogue, Vanity Fair, the New York Times, Oxford American, Southwest Review, the Believer, the Guardian, and the Criterion Collection, among many others. She has contributed stories and essays to books by Carolyn Drake, Justine Kurland, Kristine Potter, Paul Graham, Danny Lyon, and Charles Portis. A MacDowell fellow in fiction and a former editor at American Short Fiction, DoubleTake, and Vogue, she holds an MFA from the Michener Center for Writers in Austin. Originally from western North Carolina, Bengal lives in Brooklyn.
Joy Williams (foreword) is the author of several collections of short stories and essays, and four novels, including The Quick and the Dead (2010) and Harrow (2021).