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The Falling Man Projects

 

In ' The Falling Man Projects' I deconstruct Richard Drew's iconic photo and my own fascination for this image. What makes this photograph such an iconic? What story does it tell and which it doesn't?

Already in 1973, Susan Sontag wrote in her iconic collection of essays 'On Photography': "Photographs, which turn the past into a consumable object, are a short cut.'' 
This applies to a digital image possibly even more. As a result of the digital revolution and new communication technologies photographs become supreme democratic and regurgitable chunks of information. But even digital images are subject to wear and tear. In 'Forgetting Man' I question the role of remembering and forgetting in creating a narrative when information is leaking away. 

 

Richard Drew's Falling Man was just 1 photograph in a sequence of 12. Still only this image became in its shocking aesthetics a symbol for the American Trauma. In 'Ever Falling Man'  I reconstruct the lost last seconds of Falling Man through a continuous loop in an attempt to restore humanity in the iconic.

In the essay 'The rise of a narrative and narrative of a fall; an image comparison of Richard Drew's 'Falling Man'  and Jerry Siegel's/Joe Shuster's Superman.'* I describe through the representation of Superman how the Falling Man-photograph moved from controversy to iconic status. 

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