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"I would hope that I am one of a kind." -Rodney Smith Mystery and
manners, romance and fun-the sophisticated compositions and stylish
characters in the extraordinary pictures of fashion photographer
Rodney Smith (1947-2016) exist in a timeless world of his
imagination. Born in New York City, Smith started out as a
photo-essayist, turned to portrait photography, and found his
niche, and greatest success, in fashion photography. Inspired by W.
Eugene Smith, taught by Walker Evans, and devoted to the techniques
of Ansel Adams, Smith was driven by the dual ideals of technical
mastery and pure beauty. This lavish volume features nearly two
hundred reproductions of Smith's images-many that have never before
been published-and weaves together a biocritical essay by Getty
Museum curator Paul Martineau and a technical assessment of Smith's
production by the Center for Creative Photography's chief curator,
Rebecca Senf. It maps Smith's creative trajectory-including his
introduction to photography, early personal projects, teaching,
commissioned pieces, and career in fashion-and provides insight
into his personal life and character, contextualizing his work and
creative tendencies within his privileged but lonely upbringing and
his complex emotional and psychological makeup. Rodney Smith is the
definitive record of the life's work and worldview of a truly
original artist.
An artist of singular originality and vision, award-winning
landscape photographer Mark Klett has built a profound and dynamic
career that captures the space and history of the American West
while evoking notions of time, perception, and cultural memory. His
practice is grounded in both artistic inquiry and the evolution of
photographic technologies, reflecting a constellation of ideas that
blend science with poetry. Over a career spanning more than four
decades, Klett has advanced a new notion of landscape photography
that reframes our sense of what pictures of the land mean. Seeing
Time is the first retrospective of Klett's career. It presents
selected photographs from thirteen different projects, some never
before seen. The book showcases work from individual and
collaborative projects alongside texts by distinguished curators
who examine the ideas behind Klett's practice, its historical
context, and his collaborative processes. From his rephotographic
surveys, which pair conceptual art with questions about how lands
change through human intervention, to the series of portraits with
his eldest daughter on their shared birthday, the images presented
here combine to form a body of work at once expansive and richly
personal.
An unprecedented and eye-opening examination of the early career of
one of America's most celebrated photographers One of the most
influential photographers of his generation, Ansel Adams
(1902-1984) is famous for his dramatic photographs of the American
West. Although many of Adams's images are now iconic, his early
work has remained largely unknown. In this first monograph
dedicated to the beginnings of Adams's career, Rebecca A. Senf
argues that these early photographs are crucial to understanding
Adams's artistic development and offer new insights into many
aspects of the artist's mature oeuvre. Drawing on copious archival
research, Senf traces the first three decades of Adams's
photographic practice-beginning with an amateur album made during
his childhood and culminating with his Guggenheim-supported
National Parks photography of the 1940s. Highlighting the artist's
persistence in forging a career path and his remarkable ability to
learn from experience as he sharpened his image-making skills, this
beautifully illustrated volume also looks at the significance of
the artist's environmentalism, including his involvement with the
Sierra Club. Published in association with the Center for Creative
Photography at the University of Arizona
Using landscape photography to reflect on broader notions of
culture, the passage of time, and the construction of perception,
photographers Mark Klett and Byron Wolfe spent five years exploring
the Grand Canyon for their most recent project, "Reconstructing the
View". The team's landscape photographs are based on the practice
of rephotography, in which they identify sites of historic
photographs and make new photographs of those precise locations.
Klett and Wolfe referenced a wealth of images of the canyon,
ranging from historical photographs and drawings by William Bell
and William Henry Holmes, to well-known artworks by Edward Weston
and Ansel Adams, and from souvenir postcards to contemporary
digital images drawn from Flickr. The pair then employed digital
postproduction methods to bring the original images into dialogue
with their own. The result is this stunning volume, illustrated
with a wealth of full-color illustrations that attest to the role
photographers - both anonymous and great - have played in picturing
American places. Rebecca Senf's compelling essay traces the
photographers' process and methodology, conveying the complexity of
their collaboration. Stephen J. Pyne provides a conceptual
framework for understanding the history of the canyon, offering an
overview of its discovery by Europeans and its subsequent treatment
in writing, photography, and graphic arts.
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