Anne's distinctive, award-winning images of children have become classic icons celebrating life and birth.Timeless images adorn these beautiful volumes -- the perfect place to record thoughts and keep track of the important people in life. Gold foil embossed tabs add an element of elegance to address books.
Anne Geddes, MNZM, is an Australian-born photographer, currently living and working in New York. She is best known for her baby photographies and photographies on motherhood.
This coffee-table book of infant and child photographs is beyond words!! Definitely NOT one of Geddes' more familiar "cute little smiling babies" collections, this book includes images that are starkly dramatic, wistfully poignant, and even trsgic (see below). While "Until Now" does include its share of Geddes' obligatory imaginitive photographs (babies costumed as animals or inanimate objects) and fanciful settings (the famous "Cheesecake", featuring a mugging baby couched in a bed of roses, is among them), the overall mood of this collection - many of which were photographed in black-and-white - is much more dramatic and compelling: naked, days-old newborns are surrounded by nature, lay sleeping on the flattened bellies of newly-delivered women and on backs and in the arms of sculpted made models, or fill an entire page with their beautiful and terrifying fragility; the photograph of the preemie curled up sleeping in the outstretched palm of a large man is astonishing! Even many of Geddes' imaginitive photographs are more wistful than usual; several black-and-white photos of newborns posing as deeply sleeping angels with folded wings evoke a peculiar sense of loss and sadness...made much more so by the afterword, in which we learn that two of the subjects - a year-old baby, and a beautiful eight-year-old, terminally ill girl - died shortly after their photographs were taken. Don't miss this!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Although the images of the infants in costumes were charming and adorable, I preferred the natural photos of parents gently holding their children. There were a couple of photos that I wondered what the hell she was thinking, but otherwise a very sweet book.