A Trillion Sunsets: A Century of Image Overload. ICP Winter Exhibitions

TEA205801 Credit: Indian Tree, 1990-91 (hand-coloured etching with carborundum) by Hodgkin, Howard (b.1932)Private Collection/ © Alan Cristea Gallery, London/ The Bridgeman Art LibraryNationality / copyright status: English / in copyrightPLEASE NOTE: This image is protected by artist's copyright which needs to be cleared by you. If you require assistance in clearing permission we will be pleased to help you. In addition, we work with the owner of the image to clear permission. If you wish to reproduce this image, please inform us so we can clear permission for you.ADDITIONAL USAGE RESTRICTION: NOT TO BE USED AS A FINE ART PRINT OR POSTER
Martin Cid Magazine
Martin Cid Magazine

Are there too many images in the world? Too many of the wrong kind? Too many that we don’t like or want or need? These feel like very contemporary questions, but they have a rich and fascinating history. A Trillion Sunsets: A Century of Image Overload takes a long look at our worries and compulsive fascination with the proliferation of photographic images.

In the 1920s, with the rapid increase in illustrated magazines and daily newspapers, commentators asked whether society could survive the visual inundation. Artists looked to mass-media imagery and archives of all kinds to rethink the world around them.

The artists of Dada, surrealism, pop, situationism, conceptualism, and postmodernism were all, in different ways, horrified and mesmerized by the seemingly endless supply of images. They cast a critical eye over the clichés, stereotypes, and repetitive images, and looked to unearth alternative histories and counternarratives. From scrapbooks to internet memes, from collage and image appropriation to art made by algorithms, A Trillion Sunsets highlights unlikely parallels and connections across distinct decades.

International Center of Photography

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