★ ★ ★ ★ De Standaard der Letteren
'Memories like falling stars. A subtle yet ingenious collection of personal recollections, interwoven with historical insights into the development of astronomy and the catalytic role that photography played in it.'
The long-awaited new book by Magnum photographer Bieke Depoorter
In recent years, photographer Bieke Depoorter has sought out amateur stargazers, visited state-of-the-art observatories, and researched the history of astronomy. Never especially interested in the field earlier, she gradually realized that her new obsession was related to childhood memories lost due to trauma. The night sky is, after all, a kind of shared memory: the light from celestial bodies can take hundreds or thousands of light-years to reach our eyes on earth. Some observable stars may have disappeared long ago.
Depoorter felt reluctant to look at stars herself but was drawn to observing others as they observed the universe. In Blinked Myself Awake, she investigates the fragility of memory, photography's unreliability, the human desire for objectivity, and the elusive nature of ‘truth.’ She connects the dots of a highly personal narrative, interweaving images of stargazers with diaristic texts and fragments from the history of astronomy – a science that was forever changed by the invention of photography.
- 28 x 28 cm
- 136 pages
- Hardcover
- Quadrichromy
- English edition
- ISBN 978 94 6494 157 9
★ ★ ★ ★ De Standaard der Letteren
'Memories like falling stars. A subtle yet ingenious collection of personal recollections, interwoven with historical insights into the development of astronomy and the catalytic role that photography played in it.'
The long-awaited new book by Magnum photographer Bieke Depoorter
Both book and print will be signed.
In recent years, photographer Bieke Depoorter has sought out amateur stargazers, visited state-of-the-art observatories, and researched the history of astronomy. Never especially interested in the field earlier, she gradually realized that her new obsession was related to childhood memories lost due to trauma. The night sky is, after all, a kind of shared memory: the light from celestial bodies can take hundreds or thousands of light-years to reach our eyes on earth. Some observable stars may have disappeared long ago.
Depoorter felt reluctant to look at stars herself but was drawn to observing others as they observed the universe. In Blinked Myself Awake, she investigates the fragility of memory, photography's unreliability, the human desire for objectivity, and the elusive nature of ‘truth.’ She connects the dots of a highly personal narrative, interweaving images of stargazers with diaristic texts and fragments from the history of astronomy – a science that was forever changed by the invention of photography.
Limited edition with print (27,5 x 27,5 cm), 50 copies, signed and numbered.
- 28 x 28 cm
- 136 pages
- Hardcover
- Quadrichromy
- English edition
- ISBN 978 94 6494 170 8
★ ★ ★ ★ De Standaard der Letteren
'Memories like falling stars. A subtle yet ingenious collection of personal recollections, interwoven with historical insights into the development of astronomy and the catalytic role that photography played in it.'
The long-awaited new book by Magnum photographer Bieke Depoorter
Signed copy
In recent years, photographer Bieke Depoorter has sought out amateur stargazers, visited state-of-the-art observatories, and researched the history of astronomy. Never especially interested in the field earlier, she gradually realized that her new obsession was related to childhood memories lost due to trauma. The night sky is, after all, a kind of shared memory: the light from celestial bodies can take hundreds or thousands of light-years to reach our eyes on earth. Some observable stars may have disappeared long ago.
Depoorter felt reluctant to look at stars herself but was drawn to observing others as they observed the universe. In Blinked Myself Awake, she investigates the fragility of memory, photography's unreliability, the human desire for objectivity, and the elusive nature of ‘truth.’ She connects the dots of a highly personal narrative, interweaving images of stargazers with diaristic texts and fragments from the history of astronomy – a science that was forever changed by the invention of photography.
- 28 x 28 cm
- 136 pages
- Hardcover
- Quadrichromy
- English edition
- ISBN 978 94 6494 157 9