Comments/Context: Nathan Harger's photographs of city and industrial architecture take the idea of a monochrome silhouette to its logical extreme. Most of his images strip out the intermediate gray scale tones, leaving behind a flattened exercise in black and white, almost like an intricate ink or charcoal drawing. Cranes and power lines, silos and billboards become bold abstract outlines.
While this type of subject matter has already been thoroughly covered by many of the masters of photography (particularly the ID photographers from 1950s Chicago), Harger's images have a striking sense of the polarized maximum, where skies are pure blinding white, and process tanks and subway overpasses are richly black, almost tactile and velvety. He has bumped up against the point where photography intersects with graphic design, as his blocked out forms and delicate traceries lose their sense of photographic detail and are transformed into stylized representations.
While this type of subject matter has already been thoroughly covered by many of the masters of photography (particularly the ID photographers from 1950s Chicago), Harger's images have a striking sense of the polarized maximum, where skies are pure blinding white, and process tanks and subway overpasses are richly black, almost tactile and velvety. He has bumped up against the point where photography intersects with graphic design, as his blocked out forms and delicate traceries lose their sense of photographic detail and are transformed into stylized representations.
For me, the works have surprising parallels in look and feel to James Welling's formal abstractions made from strips of simple black paper. Or maybe Harger is somewhere in between, almost like a Neo-Precisionist (channeling and reinterpreting Sheeler, Demuth, Crawford and others), exploring the linearity of recognizable imagery, albeit with the tools of pared down monochrome photography.
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Collector's POV: The images in this show are generally priced based on size. The smallest individual prints are $2500, the medium 42x28 prints are $4500 and the largest prints are $5000. The two grids are $9000 and $7500. Harger's work is not consistently available in the secondary markets, so gallery retail is likely the only option for interested collectors at this point.
My favorite image in the show was Untitled (Crane 2), New York, NY, 2008; it's the picture on the right in the installation shot below. I like the geometric patterns of the vertical lines and angled cross beams, and the unbalanced composition set off by the bold black dot.
Rating: * (one star) GOOD (rating system described here)
- Artist site (here)
Through January 29th
537 West 24th Street
New York, NY 10011
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