
Relative Moments - Deanna Dikeman
After publishing Leaving and Waving in 2021, which presented only a glimpse of Deannaâs Dikemanâs 3-decade journey to document her family, Chose Commune is proud to introduce the photographerâs larger series in an exhaustive 300-page book: Relative Moments.
In Relative Moments, Deanna Dikeman chronicles ordinary moments of her familyâs activities. From gardening to cutting cake, from filling up the bird bath to mending a piece of clothing, from mowing the lawn to picking rhubarb, one gets to discover an everyday that might otherwise go unnoticed. In this book, which was generously edited and sequenced â 200 photographs in total â one is not only meant to see the moment shot in one photograph, but all the moments that compose the story.
This project captures a visual history of the photographer familyâs life, yet, there is an ongoing narrative embedded in these photographs that conveys larger, more universal truths about American culture, familiarity, and the endless source of everyday wonder that surrounds us.
Produktinformationen
Produktinformationen
Versand & RĂŒckgabe
Versand & RĂŒckgabe
Description
After publishing Leaving and Waving in 2021, which presented only a glimpse of Deannaâs Dikemanâs 3-decade journey to document her family, Chose Commune is proud to introduce the photographerâs larger series in an exhaustive 300-page book: Relative Moments.
In Relative Moments, Deanna Dikeman chronicles ordinary moments of her familyâs activities. From gardening to cutting cake, from filling up the bird bath to mending a piece of clothing, from mowing the lawn to picking rhubarb, one gets to discover an everyday that might otherwise go unnoticed. In this book, which was generously edited and sequenced â 200 photographs in total â one is not only meant to see the moment shot in one photograph, but all the moments that compose the story.
This project captures a visual history of the photographer familyâs life, yet, there is an ongoing narrative embedded in these photographs that conveys larger, more universal truths about American culture, familiarity, and the endless source of everyday wonder that surrounds us.











