Not exact matches
Exposed, a new exhibit at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art on display through April 17, 2011, examines how
voyeurism pervades our everyday life, focusing particular attention on 19th - and 20th - century photography, celebrity
culture and the growth of new surveillance technologies.
It combined over half a dozen onsite studios, feats of endurance, immigration politics, and the
voyeurism of TV
culture.
Public, Private, Secret does lay out both the negative impacts of celebrity
culture, surveillance, porn,
voyeurism, social media, et al. upon both our sense of personal privacy and our image - making habits but it is also about the agency of «being seen» and the social impact of widespread self - representation and alterity.
As such, Schorr sets up antagonistic relationships: spectacle vs.
voyeurism, identity vs. identification, performance art vs. Hollywood cult and alternative
culture vs. popular.