Around the World: The Grand Tour in Photo Albums, by Barbara Levine
and Kirsten M. Jensen. Princeton Architectural Press/208pp./$55.00 (hb).
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Around the World showcases photo albums from about 1880 to 1930
that depict travels through Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Caribbean.
During this period, the photo album became a visual personal memoir that
developed through travelers first collecting souvenir photographs and
later capturing images themselves with the first Kodak cameras. The
travelers archived these expeditions with not only photographs and text,
but also with collected ephemera--maps, advertisements, news clippings,
hotel receipts, menus, postage stamps, ship activity programs--that can
be seen as adding another dimension to their memoirs. The juxtaposition
of the photographs and ephemera creates a mood that supplements the
images and text; some elements are meticulously placed on the page while
others are layered haphazardly. Vera Talbot's 1924 album shows her
two-year travels through Asia and Africa through pages wallpapered with
photographs and minimal text. As a result, the viewer enters her
whirlwind, experiencing the cultures and meeting the inhabitants on each
of her stops.
The authors call the found albums not only
"aide-memoire[s]" but also "time machines" that
allow present-day observers to see what the travelers saw and
experienced by turning the pages. This physical experience--holding an
album and feeling its pages--is something that is lost in digital
photography and storage. Looking at these albums in an age of digital
image capture makes one wonder if these analog memories will be
digitally archived for future use and enjoyment or if they will
ultimately be lost.
KRISTINA DUNOSKI is a recent graduate of the School of Print Media
at the Rochester Institute of Technology.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Visual Studies
Workshop Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.