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Artworks
Edward RanneyEdward Ranney: The Lines, 2014Book9 3/4 x 12 in (24.8 x 30.5 cm)
Paper over board
88 pages / 44 tritone illustrations
ISBN: 978-0-300-20723-1
Distributed by Yale University Press
Edward Ranney (born 1942, B.A. 1964) is one of the most distinguished photographers of the Peruvian landscape. In 1985 Ranney began photographing the Nazca lines, a series of monumental geoglyphs that stretch across an arid plateau in southern Peru. Created by the Nazca culture some 2,000 years ago, the lines have perplexed archeologists and inspired scores of visual artists. While most clearly seen from the air in a plane or helicopter, these lines offer an even more intriguing experience when viewed from the ground—Ranney's chosen vantage for his large-format photographs.
Two decades of work on these lines in Peru and on similar glyphs found in northern Chile are brought together for the first time in this handsome volume, revealing the enigmatic beauty of these ancient manmade landforms. An illuminating essay by esteemed critic Lucy R. Lippard situates Ranney's work within the context of landscape photography and contemporary art.
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"If Watkins, or, better, Timothy O’Sullivan, were to descend with a glass-plate apparatus from photographic heaven and find himself in the bleak Andean Desert, he might produce ultra-detailed albumen prints, with elevated horizon lines and milk-white skies, resembling the images in Edward Ranney’s “The Lines.” — Christopher Lyons, Bookforum
"Stunning" — Natasha Geiling, Smithsonian
"It’s rare to find a body of photographs that is admired by and useful to both artists and scientists and all the lay people in between. But that is where Ranney’s work sits … Yale has done a splendid job of making that abundantly clear in a gem of a book." — William L. Fox, PhotoEye
"Traveling in Peru as well as in Chile with archaeologists and local guides, [Ranney’s] perspective in black and white gives [the Lines] a majesty and mystery similiar to early landscape photographers like Carleton Watkins." — Allison Meier, HyperallergicEdition of 11