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Faking It: Manipulated Photography Before Photoshop


“Faking It: Manipulated Photography before Photoshop” is an exhibition that 
takes a look at manipulated photography from the 1840s until the 1990s, when 
digital photo editing largely replaced manual techniques. The exhibition 
includes some 200 works, from quaint Victorian trick photography to misleading 
propaganda images. Organized by The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York 
City, the exhibition is currently on display at The National Gallery of Art in 
Washington, D.C., through May 5, 2013. To see a gallery of works from the 
exhibition, see this NPR photo story. 

The urge to modify camera images is as old as photography itself—only the 
methods have changed. Nearly every type of manipulation we now associate with 
digital photography was also part of the medium’s pre-digital repertoire: 
smoothing away wrinkles, slimming waistlines, adding people to a scene (or 
removing them)—even fabricating events that never took place.

via NPR, Digg

image via The Metropolitan Museum of Art


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