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Rating:  Summary: Explosive energy captured on film! Review: I have always had the fantasy of photographing dancers. A few years ago, I came across Greenfield's dance calendar. I hated to see the year end. This book is an excellent collection of her works with an interview about how she ended up with her special style of shooting and the themes behind her work. The quality of images is superb. For those of you who are familiar with Pilobilus, the dance group, you will find the connection by reading this book (teaser). The book is full of energy and motion, because that is the nature of Greenfield's work.
Rating:  Summary: beautiful pictures Review: I owned "Airborn" before purchasing this one, and I loved it so much that I sought out Breaking Bounds. I did not hesitate to buy it when I saw it on amazon[.com]. I am a dancer, and the photography of Lois Greenfield embodies the intention and choreography of the dancer so well, that it is unique. I prefer the material in "Airborn," so if your thinking of buying this book and dont have the other, take a look at the other one. I think there are much more interesting and provoking images in "Airborn". A downside to Breaking Bounds is that there are no descriptions or captions, other than the artist's name, attatched to the picture. I would like a brief explanation of the picture, as Greenfield does in "Airborn."
Rating:  Summary: Captivated you will be. Review: Sometimes, one might wonder if there's anything new and exciting that a photographer can do with the human form. The answer is yes.This volume collects 87 black-and-white photographic images taken by Greenfield from 1982 to 1991, in which she collaborated with a talented group of dancers for impromptu movement. The pieces were not choreographed, but were the results of ongoing experimentation with motion and light. The results are amazing. Fluid. Organic. Motion captured in a frozen moment, and stillness seeming to burst with unceasing energy. Bodies hang in mid-air, in mid-flight, solo or entwined or complementing each other in a synergy of arts ... a living sculpture caught in time. It's hard to describe what Greenfield has seen through her lens. The dancers exhibit incredible feats of balance, emotion and passion for the dance. In some they're wearing tights and leotards, in others they're costumed as if for a show. In many they're not clothed at all, showing off their flexing muscles and rippling skin as they move through the dance. And the camera captured it all.
Rating:  Summary: Visually stunning.... Review: This book's photography are excellent and exemplify the beauty, symmetry (asymmetry) of modern dance. All those interested in celebrating the human form will find this book fascinating, even if modern dance is not in their background. My favorite photograph is on p. 73, as it brings out the dancers in mid-flight, totally out of equilibrium, as though Doris Humphrey herself was arranging the scene.......
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