Roman Schramm

12. 7. 2014

After about fifteen years of the unconditional dominance of the photographic image as the main vehicle of visual information in the age of the Internet, it has now partly retreated from this exclusive position. The still images which in the past two decades inundated the dynamically evolving web have gradually been replaced by an even more accessible form of visual information: the moving image. Animation and various forms of video-sequencing have lately become a fixture of news servers, web pages and above all social networks.

After about fifteen years of the unconditional dominance of the photographic image as the main vehicle of visual information in the age of the Internet, it has now partly retreated from this exclusive position. The still images which in the past two decades inundated the dynamically evolving web have gradually been replaced by an even more accessible form of visual information: the moving image. Animation and various forms of video-sequencing have lately become a fixture of news servers, web pages and above all social networks.

Zdena Kolečková

TEST Michal Šimůnek is affiliated with the FAMU in Prague and the Prague University of Economics and Business. He is interested in the history and theory of photography, visual culture and consumer culture. His teaching and research focus on vernacular photography, operative images, technical apparatuses, and communities of consumption. Currently, he is a researcher in the project Operational Images and Visual Culture: Media Archaeological Investigations.