Quietly but implacably, powerful transnational corporations are gaining power over our visual world. A 'global, visual content industry' increasingly controls images supplied to advertisers, marketers and designers, yet so far the process has, paradoxically, evaded the public eye. This book is the first to expose the interior workings of the visual content industry, which produces approximately 70% of the images that define consumer cultures. The corporate acquisition of major photographic and film archives, as well as the digital rights to much of the world’s fine art, is having a profound effect on what we see. From stock photography to new technologies, this book powerfully engages with the historical and cultural issues relating to visual culture and new media. How has stock photography, the system of ‘renting out’ ready-made images, transformed the role of marketing and advertising? What impact are digital technologies having on the practices of industry professionals? How have software programs such as Photoshop enabled professionals to play ‘God’ with photographs and how does this influence our belief in the integrity of images? Combining original research on stock photography with a new theoretical take on the circulation of images in contemporary culture, The Image Factory provides a comprehensive and in-depth exploration of industrialized commercial photography, its uses and abuses.
Author(s): Paul Frosh
Series: New Technologies/New Cultures Series
Publisher: Berg Publishers
Year: 2004
Language: English
Pages: 249
Preliminaries......Page 2
Contents......Page 8
Acknowledgements......Page 10
Introduction The Making of Ordinary Images......Page 12
From the Library to the Bank: The Emergence of Stock Photography......Page 46
Shooting for Success: Stock Photography and the Production of Culture......Page 60
The Archive, the Stereotype and the Image- Repertoire Classification and Stock Photography......Page 102
The Image of Romance: Stock Images as Cultural Performances......Page 128
Rhetorics of the Overlooked: The Communicative Modes of Stock Images......Page 156
Creative Mastery and Aesthetic Angst......Page 182
Photography to the Visual Content Industry......Page 204
Epilogue......Page 226
Sources and Bibliography......Page 230
Index......Page 244