Robert Polidori’s Metropolis
Not only is he one of the worldâs preeminent architecture photographers, Robert Polidori is also–as his popular book Havana proved–a master of urban portraiture. The Montreal-born photographer has made haunting studies of bombed-out buildings in Beirut, decaying New York tenements, Versailles rooms in dusty disarray, Brasilia’s paean to spare ’50s modernism, and, most recently, the abandoned, contaminated cities of Chernobyl and Pripyat. Taken together, they add to his ongoing project: the interpretation of the interrupted urban landscape.\nThis new monograph combines the eye of a celebrated photographer with the distinctive voice of an artist and adventurer. Each breathtaking image–meticulously selected by the photographer from his own personal archive–is accompanied by a compelling first person account, based on interviews conducted by Martin C. Pedersen, executive editor of Metropolis magazine. Polidori tells behind-the-scene stories about the making of his photographs, takes us to war-torn Beirut and Brasilia and other world capitals, talks about what makes a building photogenic, how he shoots buildings he doesnât like, his favorite architects, and his love of mosques. A look at the worldâs great cities as seen through the eyes of a sharp social observer–and a great photographer.\n\nOften considered an architectural photographer, Robert Polidori is in fact a photographer of habitat. On the surface, his subjects are buildings. But at the core his lens is focused on the remnants and traces of living he finds scattered in hallways, left in back rooms and worn on façades. –The Globalist\n\nThe most interesting things are always behind us. I look at everything as archaeology. –Robert Polidori\n\nWith Martin C. Pedersen and Criswell Lapin.
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