Rita Lino
Rita Lino
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About This Book
Replica? suggest a new reading of the body and the model as a pure image, a pure tool, without referring to any representative identity, hereby ignoring today?s contemporary society of what the self should be.00Lino refers strongly to American mid-century photographer William Mortensen, who states that a body is simply considered to be ?a machine that needs adjustments.? According to Mortensen the body must be the basis, ?representation of personality and emotion [?] are irrelevant and misleading?. There is a certain dehumanization in Mortensen?s approach to the model, a return of the body to an object without meaning, in front of the camera. Mortensen saw models as clay that form the image, a body was articulated only by the operator?s intention. He wanted to strip the figure from its emotion and personality, so that we, as an audience, could consider the body as a formed prop and stare at the image as the essence, and not the subject.00In Lino?s case she is the model, the operator / photographer, the subject and the image at the same time. She is in complete control. She found a way to remove herself from representation and reduced her own body to a pure object and image, almost like a machine. ?Replica? is a manifestation of the artist?s understanding of her role in front of and behind the camera.00?Replica? is a prescient of an approaching future in which identity will surrender to the carefree machine of image magnification.
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