Jules Spinatsch. Vienna MMIX -10008/7000
Surveillance Panorama Project No. 4 - The Vienna Opera Ball
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Scheidegger und Spiess AG, Verlag
Published:24th Sep '14
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Jules Spinatsch ranks among the foremost contemporary Swiss photographic artists. Many of his projects, although controversial are thought-provoking and internationallly recognised. Since 2003, he has been working on his Surveillance Panorama Projects; shot with network cameras, these works create awareness for social habits and show the sometimes striking discrepancy between illusion and reality. In Vienna MMIX, he focused on the famous Vienna Opera Ball; from the opening of the doors at 20:32hrs, until the end of the dance at 05:17hrs, using 2 cameras to complete duel rotations, capturing an image every few seconds, an incredible 17,352 in total. Jules Spinatsch. Vienna MMIX-10008/7000 presents this fascinating social study in two volumes. Volume 1 shows 10,008 images, combined into a single chronological sequence; panoramic views that recreat the entire space, yet show only fragments of events. Volume 2 presents a selection of 70 images, documenting single moments of great intensity or intimacy, in fascinating close-up detail. It is a striking collection, documenting a range of human behaviour in a public space, over a relatively short period of time, in a very specific arena. Text in English and German.
"The Vienna State Opera House has a state-of-the-art camera surveillance system. In 2009, for the Vienna Opera Ball, they ceded control of that system to Jules Spinatsch. . . . Vienna MMIX is a remarkable document of every image taken by each of those cameras, an anthropological study in class constructed."--British Journal of Photography
"The Vienna State Opera House has a state-of-the-art camera surveillance system. In 2009, for the Vienna Opera Ball, they ceded control of that system to Jules Spinatsch. . . . Vienna MMIX is a remarkable document of every image taken by each of those cameras, an anthropological study in class constructed."--British Journal of Photography
ISBN: 9783858814081
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 2870g
780 pages