Current New York Photography Shows
New reviews added this week in red.
(Rating: Artist/Title: Venue: Closing Date: link to review)
Uptown
ONE STAR: Spies in the House of Art: Met: August 26: review
TWO STARS: Heinrich Kuehn: Neue Galerie: August 27: review
ONE STAR: Naked before the Camera: Met: September 9: review
THREE STARS: Rineke Dijkstra: Guggenheim: October 8: review
Midtown
ONE STAR: A Short History of Photography: ICP: September 2: review
ONE STAR: Christer Strömholm: ICP: September 2: review
THREE STARS: Weegee: ICP: September 2: review
ONE STAR: Taryn Simon: MoMA: September 3: review
TWO STARS: The Shaping of New Visions: MoMA: April 29: review
Chelsea
ONE STAR: Simryn Gill: Tracy Williams: August 17: review
SoHo/Lower East Side/Downtown
ONE STAR: Scott B. Davis: Hous Projects: September 1: review
Elsewhere Nearby
TWO STARS: Rising Dragon: Katonah Museum of Art: September 2: review
TWO STARS: Hank Willis Thomas: Aldrich: September 30: review
THREE STARS: Robert Adams: Yale: October 28: review
Forward Auction Calendar
New auctions added this week in red.
(Sale Date: Sale Title: Auction House: link to catalog)
No sales at this time.
The full heat of the summer is now upon us and the New York art world is on its way into hibernation. Posting between now and early September will be spotty and intermittent, as very few (if any) new photography shows will be opening until the fall season begins. In general, I will be slowly picking off a few stragglers and outliers, and singling out a few random highlights from various group shows on Twitter (@DLKCOLLECTION), but mostly, I'll be on vacation as well.
From one photography collector to another: a venue for thoughtful discussion of vintage and contemporary photography via reviews of recent museum exhibitions, gallery shows, photography auctions, photo books, art fairs and other items of interest to photography collectors large and small.
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Robert Adams, The Place We Live @Yale
The show is divided into titled sections, each accompanied by wall text drawn from one of the artist's books. For each section or case, I have detailed the number of prints/books on view and their dates:
Lobby gallery
- 6 gelatin silver prints, 1999
- The Plains: 8 gelatin silver prints, 1965-1973
- Eden: 8 gelatin silver prints, 1968
- The New West: 22 gelatin silver prints, 1968-1971
- Case: White Churches of the Plains (1), The Architecture and Art of Early Hispanic Colorado (1), Prairie (2), 2 gelatin silver prints, 1968, 1974
- Summer Nights: 13 gelatin silver prints, 1976-1982
- Ludlow: 5 gelatin silver prints, 1978
- Case: Eden (2), The New West (3), Commercial Residential (2), Summer Nights (2), Summer Nights: Walking (2)
- Book display: 3 volumes, The Place We Live, 1 gelatin silver print, 1978
- What We Bought: 31 gelatin silver prints, 1973-1974
- Cottonwoods: 11 gelatin silver prints, 1973-1995, 1 cottonwood bark fragment, 1982
- The Pawnee National Grassland: 6 gelatin silver prints, 1984
- The Missouri West: 10 gelatin silver prints: 1975-1983
- Our Parents, Our Children: 15 gelatin silver prints, 1981
- Case: Our Lives and Our Children (1), No Small Journeys (2), From The Missouri West (2), Beauty In Photography (3)
- Screenprint: Beautiful Small Town Names
- Los Angeles Spring: 21 gelatin silver prints, 1978-1983
- Case: Los Angeles Spring (2), Listening To The River (2), California (2), Gone? (2), Notes From Friends (1), Why People Photograph (1)
- Along Some Rivers: 28 gelatin silver prints, 1984-1987
- The Pacific: 17 gelatin silver prints, 1991, 2003, 1 wooden sculpture
- Turning Back: 22 gelatin silver prints, 1976, 1999, 2003
- Case: To Make It Home (1), West From The Columbia (2), Time Passes (1), Turning Back (2), Tree Line (2)
- Small reading room: 4 prints paired with poems by A.R. Aamons, Emily Dickinson, William Blake, and Zbigniew Herbert
- Case: Pine Valley (2), A Portrait In Landscapes (2), Still Lies The Manzanita (2), I Hear The Leaves And Love The Light (2), Along Some Rivers (2), 2 eroded rocks
- Pine Valley: 6 gelatin silver prints, 2001-2003
- Bodhisattva: 5 gelatin silver prints, 1999
- Alder Leaves: 5 gelatin silver prints, 2004
- The War In Iraq: 6 gelatin silver prints: 2004-2007
- Sea Stories, This Day: 8 gelatin silver prints, 1999-2009, 1 carved sculpture, 2001, 1 notebook
- Case: Alders (2), Questions For An Overcast Day (2), Bodhisattva (2), Sea Stories (1), This Day (2), Close At Hand (2), Skogen (2), What Can We Believe (1), 1 wood sculpture
On one hand, I think a very compelling case can be made that Adams is a truly radical innovator who has fundamentally and permanently redefined the nature (no pun intended) of American landscape photography. Adams' long term influence is undeniable: I have met plenty of photographers who count him as one of their photographic heroes, and his books, writings, and teachings continue to have countless ardent, cult-like followers. On the other hand, I think there is a largely silent body of viewers who react to Adams' work with much less enthusiasm, finding it often ugly, underwhelming, and a bit boring. Its dissimilarity to what they have come to expect from the landscape genre (the dramatic grandeur of Ansel Adams) makes some of the work very hard to connect to; it doesn't reveal itself so quickly or boldly. In our first years of collecting, I will admit to having been in this second camp; I found his images to be like parsnips or kale - things I was supposed to like, that were obviously good for me, but which in all honesty, I found somewhat less than entirely tasty. Over the years, and with a growing shelf full of Adams' eloquent books in our library, I have gradually moved closer to the supporters point of view, slowly being won over by the consistent craftsmanship, elegance, thoughtfulness, and quiet beauty in even the most distressing and damaged of his photographs. So it was with some excitement that I traveled to Yale to see this grand, traveling retrospective, in the hopes of clarifying and deepening my understanding of his work once and for all. I'm afraid my findings are likely to offend both sides, as ample evidence of both the truly great and the truly forgettable is on view.
Covering roughly 45 years of time, the exhibition is gathered into thematic groups (both large and small), roughly mirroring bodies of work as they were originally presented in book form. In many ways, this helps to recreate some of the intimate sequencing and storytelling that is the hallmark of Adams' books, but strictly speaking, this retrospective is not rigidly chronological, as some subjects span decades and others overlap or jump around in time. To help clarify the overall "which came first" ordering (at least in my own mind), I have taken the dates of the images on view (by grouping) and laid them out on the timeline below:
Adams' early square format pictures from the late 1960s feel rooted in vernacular American modernism and a reverence for traditional American landscape photography. They echo the spare purity of a Paul Strand or a Walker Evans: an angular white church, the towering form of white grain elevator, broad grassland views with massive 19th century clouds. But his Eden pictures which follow signal the beginning of a new approach: this Eden isn't the leafy garden of snakes and apple trees we all know, it's a dusty flat expanse of interstate highway and dry desert, decorated with truck stops and gas stations. Seeing these pictures is like watching a light go on - it suddenly becomes obvious that there is another way to see the geography of the land, that the word landscape can be applied not only to classically beautiful mountains and rivers, but to the evidence of the human relationship to the natural world. There is a sense of discovery here, a philosophical opening of a door.
What I find fascinating about these pictures is that they were actually surprisingly well aligned with earlier American landscape photographs that openly celebrated the majesty of the land. But instead of searching out the most beautiful vistas to make his point (like his predecessors), Adams made his argument for the critical importance of the land by capturing our destruction of it. In New Topographics-speak, we were now in the realm of the "man-altered" landscape, and Adams' view of these modifications was alternately acerbic, distrustful, grief stricken, and downright angry. Other pictures from this same time (the What We Bought series) dive deeper into the grim lives of the inhabitants and their drab offices, liquor stores, fast food joints, and dreary strip mall convenience stores. There is a sense of being both offended and deeply saddened by the tradeoffs we have made in our development of the West, a pervasive pessimism to be found in the imperfections of these communities. These pictures present a depressing reality, but I think Adams' lasting contribution to photography is to be found in these early 1970s images and their precise examination of our separation from and disregard for the bounty of nature.
His projects in the early 1980s continued this pattern of gradual softening, as if Adams himself was becoming worn down and was in need of a few moments of optimism. Against the backdrop of soul draining suburban parking lots, he found multi-generational caring as expressed in embraces, carried babies, and hand held children. In the Pawnee National Grassland, he enjoyed huge, tumbling skies, vast open grass, and unspoiled sunflowers against a barbed wire fence. And along unnamed rivers, he exchanged an airplane for a hawk, reveled in the whiteness of fresh snow cover, and examined the delicate textures of dirt roads. Adams seemed to be saying that there was indeed beauty to be found in these landscapes if we were patient enough to look for it.
.
Retrospectives are designed to help us trace connection points and the evolution of artistic ideas, and I think this exhibition is highly successful in showing the gestation of Adams' original conceptual view point, its development and expansion over time, and its ultimate waning and subtle transformation. I think it cements Adams' rightful place in the pantheon of American landscape photographers, and highlights his consistently genuine and thoughtful concern for the way we have treated the land. That his flashes of brilliance have become less frequent since the 1970s hardly matters; his imprint on our ability to see the impact of our environmental choices is permanent. If there is one recurring visual motif in Adams' work, it is the open empty dirt road, cutting across the vastness of the landscape, vanishing into the horizon; there are likely a dozen of these pictures scattered throughout the show. At first, the road is discouraging in its slash across the unspoiled natural world. Later, it is perhaps assimilated and accommodated, shaded by an overhanging cottonwood tree, becoming part of the landscape itself, telling us something of our history. And going forward, it points the way to the future. What Robert Adams brought to landscape photography was an alternately caustic and graceful eye for these changes, an ability to show us what we didn't want to acknowledge or had somehow overlooked, with the hope that it would knock some sense into us, so that our journey down that long road would be smarter and more aware.
Rating: *** (three stars) EXCELLENT (rating system described here)
Transit Hub:
- Review: Hartford Courant (here)
Through October 28th
Yale University Art Gallery
1111 Chapel Street
New Haven, CT 06510
Thursday, August 9, 2012
The Checklist: 8/9/12
Current New York Photography Shows
New reviews added this week in red.
(Rating: Artist/Title: Venue: Closing Date: link to review)
Uptown
ONE STAR: Spies in the House of Art: Met: August 26: review
TWO STARS: Heinrich Kuehn: Neue Galerie: August 27: review
ONE STAR: Naked before the Camera: Met: September 9: review
THREE STARS: Rineke Dijkstra: Guggenheim: October 8: review
Midtown
ONE STAR: A Short History of Photography: ICP: September 2: review
ONE STAR: Christer Strömholm: ICP: September 2: review
THREE STARS: Weegee: ICP: September 2: review
ONE STAR: Taryn Simon: MoMA: September 3: review
TWO STARS: The Shaping of New Visions: MoMA: April 29: review
Chelsea
ONE STAR: Joni Sternbach: Rick Wester: August 10: review
ONE STAR: Simryn Gill: Tracy Williams: August 17: review
SoHo/Lower East Side/Downtown
ONE STAR: Scott B. Davis: Hous Projects: September 1: review
Elsewhere Nearby
TWO STARS: Rising Dragon: Katonah Museum of Art: September 2: review
TWO STARS: Hank Willis Thomas: Aldrich: September 30: review
Forward Auction Calendar
New auctions added this week in red.
(Sale Date: Sale Title: Auction House: link to catalog)
No sales at this time.
The full heat of the summer is now upon us and the New York art world is on its way into hibernation. Posting between now and early September will be spotty and intermittent, as very few (if any) new photography shows will be opening until the fall season begins. In general, I will be slowly picking off a few stragglers and outliers, and singling out a few random highlights from various group shows on Twitter (@DLKCOLLECTION), but mostly, I'll be on vacation as well.
New reviews added this week in red.
(Rating: Artist/Title: Venue: Closing Date: link to review)
Uptown
ONE STAR: Spies in the House of Art: Met: August 26: review
TWO STARS: Heinrich Kuehn: Neue Galerie: August 27: review
ONE STAR: Naked before the Camera: Met: September 9: review
THREE STARS: Rineke Dijkstra: Guggenheim: October 8: review
Midtown
ONE STAR: A Short History of Photography: ICP: September 2: review
ONE STAR: Christer Strömholm: ICP: September 2: review
THREE STARS: Weegee: ICP: September 2: review
ONE STAR: Taryn Simon: MoMA: September 3: review
TWO STARS: The Shaping of New Visions: MoMA: April 29: review
Chelsea
ONE STAR: Joni Sternbach: Rick Wester: August 10: review
ONE STAR: Simryn Gill: Tracy Williams: August 17: review
SoHo/Lower East Side/Downtown
ONE STAR: Scott B. Davis: Hous Projects: September 1: review
Elsewhere Nearby
TWO STARS: Rising Dragon: Katonah Museum of Art: September 2: review
TWO STARS: Hank Willis Thomas: Aldrich: September 30: review
Forward Auction Calendar
New auctions added this week in red.
(Sale Date: Sale Title: Auction House: link to catalog)
No sales at this time.
The full heat of the summer is now upon us and the New York art world is on its way into hibernation. Posting between now and early September will be spotty and intermittent, as very few (if any) new photography shows will be opening until the fall season begins. In general, I will be slowly picking off a few stragglers and outliers, and singling out a few random highlights from various group shows on Twitter (@DLKCOLLECTION), but mostly, I'll be on vacation as well.
Monday, August 6, 2012
Simryn Gill, My Own Private Angkor @Williams
Comments/Context: Simryn Gill's images of a decaying Malaysian housing development combine two artistic approaches that normally don't go together: the shadowy romance of ruined interiors and the formalism of hard edged abstraction. The result is a elusive series of photographs that shift uneasily between these two styles, moving back and forth between ragged beauty and conceptual rigor, never quite eliminating the unexpected dissonance but somehow mixing the elements with quiet grace.
The pictures start with the abandoned, vine covered rooms we've seen before countless times: dingy floors, rubble piles, black mold, invasive greenery climbing in through open windows and cracking walls. Tile, brick, and stucco elegantly crumble in shades of grey, stripped clean of valuable wiring and fixtures, leaving behind ragged holes and scarred openings that flood the rooms with light. Dark rubber window insulation often winds across the floors like a wiggling pile of sinister black snakes.
In their haste to mine out the metal window frames, the scavengers have left behind dozens of long rectangular pieces of glass, which have been haphazardly leaned against available walls. Smoky and partially transparent, the glass panes have been set together in pairs, overlapped in layers, or mixed together vertically and horizontally. Combined with the varying effects of light and shadow, the endless patterns of crisp geometric forms would have kept Josef Albers happily busy. Seen together, the series is a rigid monochrome theme and variation exercise, set against a backdrop of rotting decomposition.
What is surprising about these photographs is the way in which the spooky spirituality of the empty rooms (think Woodman, Meatyard etc.) has become a venue for abstraction. There is a lush, silent softness to these installations that makes the abstraction seem muted and natural, even when it is at its most cerebral. Gill has successfully merged opposing impulses in each frame, creating visual balance between chaos and order.
Rating: * (one star) GOOD (rating system described here)
Transit Hub:
- Reviews: New Yorker (here), TimeOut New York (here)
- dOCUMENTA13 (here)
- Australian representative to the 2013 Venice Biennale (here)
Through August 17th
Tracy Williams Ltd.
521 West 23rd Street
New York, NY 10011
Thursday, August 2, 2012
The Checklist: 8/2/12
Current New York Photography Shows
New reviews added this week in red.
(Rating: Artist/Title: Venue: Closing Date: link to review)
Uptown
ONE STAR: Spies in the House of Art: Met: August 26: review
TWO STARS: Heinrich Kuehn: Neue Galerie: August 27: review
ONE STAR: Naked before the Camera: Met: September 9: review
THREE STARS: Rineke Dijkstra: Guggenheim: October 8: review
Midtown
ONE STAR: A Short History of Photography: ICP: September 2: review
ONE STAR: Christer Strömholm: ICP: September 2: review
THREE STARS: Weegee: ICP: September 2: review
ONE STAR: Taryn Simon: MoMA: September 3: review
TWO STARS: The Shaping of New Visions: MoMA: April 29: review
Chelsea
ONE STAR: Barbara Kasten/Justin Beal: Bortolami: August 3: review
ONE STAR: Zoe Strauss: Bruce Silverstein: August 3: review
ONE STAR: Holly Zausner: Postmasters: August 3: review
ONE STAR: Joni Sternbach: Rick Wester: August 10: review
SoHo/Lower East Side/Downtown
ONE STAR: John Houck: KANSAS: August 4: review
ONE STAR: Scott B. Davis: Hous Projects: September 1: review
Elsewhere Nearby
TWO STARS: Rising Dragon: Katonah Museum of Art: September 2: review
TWO STARS: Hank Willis Thomas: Aldrich: September 30: review
Forward Auction Calendar
New auctions added this week in red.
(Sale Date: Sale Title: Auction House: link to catalog)
No sales at this time.
The full heat of the summer is now upon us and the New York art world is on its way into hibernation. Posting between now and early September will be spotty and intermittent, as very few (if any) new photography shows will be opening until the fall season begins. In general, I will be slowly picking off a few stragglers and outliers, and singling out a few random highlights from various group shows on Twitter (@DLKCOLLECTION), but mostly, I'll be on vacation as well.
New reviews added this week in red.
(Rating: Artist/Title: Venue: Closing Date: link to review)
Uptown
ONE STAR: Spies in the House of Art: Met: August 26: review
TWO STARS: Heinrich Kuehn: Neue Galerie: August 27: review
ONE STAR: Naked before the Camera: Met: September 9: review
THREE STARS: Rineke Dijkstra: Guggenheim: October 8: review
Midtown
ONE STAR: A Short History of Photography: ICP: September 2: review
ONE STAR: Christer Strömholm: ICP: September 2: review
THREE STARS: Weegee: ICP: September 2: review
ONE STAR: Taryn Simon: MoMA: September 3: review
TWO STARS: The Shaping of New Visions: MoMA: April 29: review
Chelsea
ONE STAR: Barbara Kasten/Justin Beal: Bortolami: August 3: review
ONE STAR: Zoe Strauss: Bruce Silverstein: August 3: review
ONE STAR: Holly Zausner: Postmasters: August 3: review
ONE STAR: Joni Sternbach: Rick Wester: August 10: review
SoHo/Lower East Side/Downtown
ONE STAR: John Houck: KANSAS: August 4: review
ONE STAR: Scott B. Davis: Hous Projects: September 1: review
Elsewhere Nearby
TWO STARS: Rising Dragon: Katonah Museum of Art: September 2: review
TWO STARS: Hank Willis Thomas: Aldrich: September 30: review
Forward Auction Calendar
New auctions added this week in red.
(Sale Date: Sale Title: Auction House: link to catalog)
No sales at this time.
The full heat of the summer is now upon us and the New York art world is on its way into hibernation. Posting between now and early September will be spotty and intermittent, as very few (if any) new photography shows will be opening until the fall season begins. In general, I will be slowly picking off a few stragglers and outliers, and singling out a few random highlights from various group shows on Twitter (@DLKCOLLECTION), but mostly, I'll be on vacation as well.
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