Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Re: Pre-order - 'Diableries, Stereoscopic Adventures in Hell'

Thanks Thomas!  I would ask you to make one minor modification, please.  Could you modify the reference to the Smithsonian from "notorious" - which means shockingly bad, to something like, "world famous"?  It did give me a smile though. 
   Hope you are improving!  Feeling any better?  Hopefully you will be out of the hospital soon.
Best, paula


On Mon, Apr 29, 2013 at 5:22 PM, Thomas Weynants <thomas.weynants@telenet.be> wrote:
Dear List members,

The best photo book from Hell is now available for pre-order online.
 
Diableries are an intriguing set of 19th. century humorous, satirical and political inspired 3-D photographs. These albumin stereo prints depict daily life in hell, a world inhabited by male skeletons and demons, often in contrast with provocative and surprisingly realistic women modeled in clay. Many of the images show political critique and satire on the Napoleonic regime.

Goto Visual Media to read a detailed review:
Allegiance to the Devil, even a book choice disclosing these rare stereo-photographs can be misleading. Two new titles on the subject are announced for 2013, however only one is worth to purchase or even look at. A detailed comparison of both publications clearly distinguish the work of the thorough researcher from "The work of Satan", so to speak. Read why http://www.visual-media.eu/publications_books_photo.html
'Diableries, Stereoscopic Adventures in Hell'
The review is based on a exclusive pre-publication preview of this forthcoming title announced for Halloween 2013.
Obviously, the only right choice is the forthcoming 'Diableries, Stereoscopic Adventures in Hell' by Denis Pellerin, Brian May and Paula Fleming.
Firstly because this book is based on more than a decade academic research by an established French photo historian & collector, Denis Pellerin. As a result, the important hidden meanings of these satirical images are explained for the majority of these 180 scenes from Hell. Pellerin has written several books and articles on 19th. century stereo photography and currently works on his PHD. For further details see the review.
 
All best,
 
Thomas
 

 
 

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To find out, visit the online Archeological Media_Museum of Early Visual Media.
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All requests are welcome via this group.
 
Thomas Weynants
thomas@visual-media.eu
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--
Visual Media displays a very wide field of wondrous devices which opens a lot of opportunities for research and discovering in the field of Media Archeology.
To find out, visit the online Archeological Media_Museum of Early Visual Media.
http://www.visual-media.eu
 
All requests are welcome via this group.
 
Thomas Weynants
thomas@visual-media.eu
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Early Visual Media Archeology" group.
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