Loving. A photographic history of men in love 1850-1950
Five Continents Editions
Edited by Treadwell N. and Nini H.
Milano, 2021; bound, pp. 336, b/w ill., cm 22,5x28,5.
ISBN: 88-7439-928-6 - EAN13: 9788874399284
Subject: Collections,Photography
Languages:
Weight: 1.77 kg
What do images of men in love during a time when it was illegal tell us? What are we looking for in the faces of these people who dared to challenge the mores of their time to seek solace together? Flipping through the book, it wasn't that I felt that I learned a great deal about being LGBTQ, but what gave me comfort was the feeling that we're not going anywhere. Seeing ourselves in the past is as much about being certain of our present and, dare I say, our future. When we see them as connected, we feel more whole, and that's what love is about for many of us anyway. -- Hrag Vartanian ? Hyperallergic
The sweetness of the images is palpable, and may even startle in their brazenness, such as the photo of the men holding a preprinted sign that reads: "Not Married But Willing to Be." ....The Nini-Treadwell collection...not only allows us to imagine what it must have felt like to discover this image and hold it and freely breathe in these loving looks. It also becomes a promise we keep to these forgotten men, acknowledging their devotion, who loved despite all the odds. -- Jerry Portwood ? Rolling Stone
...a powerful testament to same-sex couples and the strength they demonstrated prior to the Stonewall uprising. ? Huffington Post
In public, the men [in LOVING]...were compelled to hide their sexual identities. But in these candid photos, their resilience is plainly visible. ? Dallas Morning News
Loving, a book of more than 300 pictures...dating from before the Civil War to just after WWII...captures connections so deep?and radiates happiness so pure?it simply overtakes you. -- Bill Shapiro ? Esquire Magazine
As well as showing the evolution of attitudes, hairstyles and fashion through the decades, the images also chart the development of photography as a medium. The collection's oldest pictures were made using early forms of camera, and include ambrotypes, which were produced on glass, and daguerreotypes, which appeared on metal plates. The archive travels through to the emergence of paper photography and then photo booths, which, like the various shots taken in the reflections of mirrors, eliminated the need to confide in a photographer. ? CNN Style