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Coloring the Past – Blaspheming the Sacrosanct or Laudable [Re]Creativity?

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Swedish artist Sanna Dullaway dropped some of her latest work on the Internet recently and responses have been all over the map. Dullaway’s recolorization process sees her take iconic black and white photos [Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, Anne Frank] and sprinkle rainbow dust all over them. [The actual process is a little more complex than that. For a taste, check out this YouTube video demonstrating the recolorization of the classic ‘The American Way’ photo. And then take a closer look at Dullaway’s work in the gallery above]

There’s no shortage of opinions on the transformations. I’ve heard everything from “brilliant” to “blasphemy.” The latter seems a bit harsh. At worst these can be regarded as a vain attempt to improve upon classics, sort of like remaking Total Recall. Are the colorized versions are “superior” to the originals? That’s always come down to personal taste. And where that’s concerned, well, who doesn’t find their breath short when the orange flames and robes explode from the screen in the Burning Monk shot? And that cool blue of the car, invoking the water we all so desperately want to douse on the man? That’s a worthy artistic exploration in my book.

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35 replies on:
Coloring the Past – Blaspheming the Sacrosanct or Laudable [Re]Creativity?

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  1. Carrol Gerringer says:
    November 18, 2012 at 4:50 pm

    I think that I use that great article to my work 🙂

  2. faisal says:
    October 7, 2012 at 11:33 am

    I like the right one more, colour do matter.

  3. Joel says:
    October 7, 2012 at 7:19 am

    The blue car visible behind the monk is on display in Hue, Vietnam. I saw the car a few months ago. Behind the car on the wall hangs a colorized version of the self-immolation photo, This is one of the few times when I prefer the colorized version over the original.

  4. vdrielc says:
    October 6, 2012 at 2:06 pm

    I really like the Lincoln re-colour. The rest really should stay BW, it just looks so much better for these images.

  5. Bob Smith says:
    October 6, 2012 at 1:19 pm

    I like the portraits but I don’t think it serves any purpose to color serious historical news events just because it can be done. It comes off to me as sensational in the case of the immolation of the monk and just silly in the photo of the atomic blast. The colorizing makes it look like a happy postcard and I feel it lessens the impact. They’re well done, though,

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