Visual Culture Blog

Images, Politics and Criticism by @MarcoBohr

Menu

Skip to content
  • About
    • Publications
    • Bookshop
    • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Categories
    • Art
    • Cinema
    • Consumerism
    • Documentary
    • Gender
    • Iconography
    • Ideology
    • Memory
    • Photography
    • Photojournalism
    • Politics
    • Religion
    • Sexuality
    • Television
    • Typology
    • Vernacularism
    • Voyeurism
  • Photography Maps
    • Amsterdam
    • Antwerp
    • Athens
    • Bangkok
    • Barcelona
    • Berlin
    • Brussels
    • Budapest
    • Gothenburg
    • Istanbul
    • Kraków
    • Lahore
    • Lisbon
    • Ljubljana
    • London
    • Madrid
    • Melbourne
    • Mumbai
    • New Delhi
    • New York
    • Paris
    • Rome
    • São Paulo
    • Tokyo
    • Vancouver
  • Subscribe
    • Email Feed
    • RSS Feed
    • Bloglovin’
    • Facebook
    • Tumblr
    • Twitter
  • Support this blog

Monthly Archives: December 2011

Laurel Nakadate’s Controlled Voyeurism

Laurel Nakadate, Oops!, 2000 The noughties are commonly described as a decade in which celebrity culture proliferated, a decade which saw a massive increase in the commodification of sexualized imagery, also the decade of voyeurism via TV shows such as Big Brother. The American video artist and photographer Laurel Nakadate, born in 1975 and raised…

December 3, 2011 in Art, Cinema, Gender, Photography, Sexuality, Vernacularism, Voyeurism.
Follow @MarcoBohr

Get blog posts by email

Enter your email address:

Follow

Friend me on FacebookFollow me on TwitterFollow me on TumblrFollow me on PinterestRSS FeedAdd me to your circlesJoin my network on LinkedIn

Subscribe

  • Bloglovin'
  • Email Feed
  • Networkedblogs
  • RSS Feed

25 Most Read Articles

  • 01. What is hipster photography?
  • 02. Post-Mortem Photography is Alive
  • 03. The Pornofication of the Female Pop Star
  • 04. The Many Bodies of Yurie Nagashima
  • 05. Voyeurism and Appropriation in Kohei Yoshiyuki's 'The Park'
  • 06. Breaking the Image of Mother and Child
  • 07. The Family Photos of Yurie Nagashima
  • 08. Laurel Nakadate's Controlled Voyeurism
  • 09. Voyeurism, Fantasy and the Anonymous Subway Photographer
  • 10. The Perfume Ad Formula
  • 11. Deconstructing the Situation Room Photograph
  • 12. The Dust Lady of 9/11
  • 13. Photojournalism, Ethics and the Afterlife of a Photograph
  • 14. Contortionism in the Photographs of Satomi Shirai
  • 15. Weegee, Vice and Voyeurism
  • 16. Banning the Amateurish American Apparel Ads
  • 17. The Woman in the Red Dress
  • 18. The Perversity of Propaganda
  • 19. So that others can free
  • 20. The Lost Camera in Ceausescu's Final Speech
  • 21. Ten Japanese Photobooks
  • 22. Voyeurism in the Photographs of Hisaji Hara
  • 23. Google Street View and the Politics of Exploitation
  • 24. Wooing the Spectator in Juergen Teller's Photographs
  • 25. Photojournalism, Ethics and a Trail of Blood

Photography Maps

  • Amsterdam
  • Antwerp
  • Athens
  • Bangkok
  • Barcelona
  • Berlin
  • Brussels
  • Budapest
  • Gothenburg
  • Istanbul
  • Kraków
  • Lahore
  • Lisbon
  • Ljubljana
  • London
  • Madrid
  • Melbourne
  • Mumbai
  • New Delhi
  • New York
  • Paris
  • Rome
  • São Paulo
  • Tokyo
  • Vancouver
Proudly powered by WordPress | Theme: Expound by Konstantin Kovshenin
  • Copy / Paste
  • Site Search
  • Wikipedia
  • Google
  • Facts
  • Amazon
  • eBay
  • Outlook
  • Gmail
  • Y! Mail
  • Twitter
  • Search & Share

Sign up the the Visual Culture Blog

  • Receive every blog post by email
  • It's free
  • Email *never* passed on to 3rd party

Get blog posts by email