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Slow photography is a term describing a tendency in contemporary photography and arts. In response to the spread of digital photography and the snapshot, artists and photographers retake manual techniques and working methods to work slower, manually and in constant dialogue with the physical materials of the images. The term was first introduced by Norwegian photographer, artist and photo educator Johanne Seines Svendsen in the article "The Slow Photography – In Motion", published in the book ''Through a Glass, Darkly'' in January 2013 in collaboration with the North Norwegian Art Center, The Arts Council of Norway and the Norwegian Photographical Fund. The term was put into shape in the installation "The Slow Photography" at ''The 67th North Norwegian Art Exhibition'', first opened in the city of Bodø in January 2013. The installation contained five original ambrotypes and alumitypes presented in a monter; and presents contemporary work with the historical photographical process wet plate collodion (1851–80). Slow photography can be seen in the context of cultural, political and environmental tendencies and associated with other elements of the slow movement. ==See also== *Slow movement *Slow food *Slow architecture *CittaSlow (slow cities) 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Slow photography」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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