Photographer Jonathan Leavitt has produced a book that calls to be in the collection of any serious photographer and every lover of poetry -- and especially so if you have a love for the work of poet, Wallace Stevens.
"Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird" is a masterful homage to Steven's poem of the same name. But even more so, the marriage of Leavitt's images to the poem is absolutely brilliant. Each photo corresponds to a line within the literary accompaniment, and the two artistic elements work together to create that "third profound image."
Leavitt's black-and-white imagery is punctuated by a sole color photograph intersecting a very specific portion of the poem. The images are printed as quadtones -- with a single CMYK image -- all in 400-line screening for optimum resolution in print. Jonathan Leavitt oversaw all editing and was on press during production.
Read the accompanying interview with Jonathan to gain a deeper appreciation for the photographer and the work.
"Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird" is a masterful homage to Steven's poem of the same name. But even more so, the marriage of Leavitt's images to the poem is absolutely brilliant. Each photo corresponds to a line within the literary accompaniment, and the two artistic elements work together to create that "third profound image."
Leavitt's black-and-white imagery is punctuated by a sole color photograph intersecting a very specific portion of the poem. The images are printed as quadtones -- with a single CMYK image -- all in 400-line screening for optimum resolution in print. Jonathan Leavitt oversaw all editing and was on press during production.
Read the accompanying interview with Jonathan to gain a deeper appreciation for the photographer and the work.
- Size: 9.5 x 11.5-inches; landscape format. - Extent: 120pp + end leaves + cased cover - Binding: Hard-bound with silk-screened cloth quarter binding. - Film laminated cover wrap over 3mm boards. - Section sewn. - CMYK + Quadtone Blacks + PMS Gray + Spot Gloss Varnish - 400 line hybrid screening |
Design: Philip Unetic, Princeton NJ
Printing: Brilliant, Exton PA