INTERVIEW: “Gil Blank with Thomas Ruff” (2004)

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…he portraits up to a colossal scale, I forced the viewer to realize that he is not standing in front of Heinz, but in front of a photograph of Heinz. GB: We’ve seen that kind of device before in portraiture, as in the work of Chuck Close. But there are some very important differences, not the least of which is that Close is dealing with paintings, and the immediate realization a viewer has that one is looking at exactly that, at “marks of colored…

INTERVIEW: “Gil Blank with Thomas Ruff” (2004)

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CAMILO JOSE VERGARA CANDIDA HOFER CEDRIC NUNN CHAUNCEY HARE CHRIS KILLIP CHRIS SHAW CHRISTINE OSINSKI CHUCK CLOSE CINDY SHERMAN Tweet…

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WALKER EVANS & ROBERT FRANK: “Walker Evans and Robert Frank – An Essay on Influence by Tod Papageorge” (1981)

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…most responsive description we have of the spirit of Frank’s pictures. 4) Eugenia Parry Janis and Wendy MacNeil, eds., Photography within the Humanities (Danbury, N.H., Addison House, 1977), p.56. 5) Ibid., p. 56. 6) The wall label for his part of this exhibition was written by Evans himself: “Valid photography, like humor, seems to be too serious a matter to talk about seriously. If, in a note, it can’t be defined weightily, what it is not can b…

WALKER EVANS & ROBERT FRANK: “Walker Evans and Robert Frank – An Essay on Influence by Tod Papageorge” (1981)

DAIDO MORIYAMA: Daido Moriyama: Investigations of a Dog” (1999)

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… stomach-cutting of the samurai, in the office of the commander of the new Japanese army. He wanted to see the restoration of Imperial power and military culture, he wrote, and he is therefore called a political rightist. The label helps us little toward understanding him, though. The leftist students who fought the police in the streets and tunnels of Shinjuku, and who appear in a few of Tomatsu’s and Moriyama’s photographs, also sho…

DAIDO MORIYAMA: Daido Moriyama: Investigations of a Dog” (1999)

DIANE ARBUS: “Diane Arbus’ Noah’s Ark of Humanity” (2004)

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…23-1971) wrote that she was compiling her photographs into a ‘Family Album,’ likening it to a ‘Noah’s Ark’ and imagining in it the people who might be remembered and saved in the aftermath of the tumultuous 1960s.” Exhibition label, Portland Museum of Art, Diane Arbus’ cast of characters is a startlingly unusual group. They are people held together by all sorts of bonds, traditional and alternative, yet each merits special attention. Her mothers,…

DIANE ARBUS: “Diane Arbus’ Noah’s Ark of Humanity” (2004)

INTERVIEW: “Interview with Artist Cindy Sherman – A Woman of Parts” (1997)

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… work. I can’t stand to give him even that much credit. NF: Has your work aroused censorship in America? CS: No, I don’t think so. But I wasn’t surprised when Metro Pictures felt they should put up a warning label for kids. NF: You mean the sign at the exhibition of the Sex Pictures that read, “Parents might want to view the works inside before letting their children see them.” CS: Yes. But on the other hand, I suppo…

INTERVIEW: “Interview with Artist Cindy Sherman – A Woman of Parts” (1997)

ANDREAS GURSKY: “The Big Picture” (2001)

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… but, on taking a closer look (as these images always demand), you can see shoes from both the fall and spring collections, a simultaneity never encountered in a Prada store. Despite the fact that fashion in general (and this label in particular) is all about currency and ephemer ality, Gursky creates from it something so paradoxically solid that the image compresses “fashion” to become its emblem. Shoes aren’t the only seemingl…

ANDREAS GURSKY: “The Big Picture” (2001)

“The Photographic Idea: Reconsidering Conceptual Photography” (1999)

…tists and the historical effects of their work are rarely synonymous. For example, artists who have benefited from the renewed critical and curatorial interest in Conceptual Art in the last decade have themselves resisted the label “conceptual.”(2) This is understandable – no practicing artist wants to be pigeon-holed as an example of an historical movement. Yet the conceptual designation has been crucial to the historical under…

“The Photographic Idea: Reconsidering Conceptual Photography” (1999)

WALKER EVANS: “Scavenging the Landscape – Walker Evans and American Life” (1996)

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…n a vernacular culture, the architecture and details of a landscape that idiosyncratically described the U.S. This became the central theme of Evans’s photography as supported by both Keller and Rathbone, who dispel the labeling of Evans as a “socially concerned” photographer. Whatever Evans’s personal beliefs were about the social conditions brought on by the Depression, he did not use photography as a crusading practice….

WALKER EVANS: “Scavenging the Landscape – Walker Evans and American Life” (1996)

INTERVIEW: “Conversation with Dirk Braeckman” (1998)

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… works are ‘portraits’ of spaces, but really you could just as easily turn that around: several of the portraits in my earlier work were to a certain extent already images of ‘spaces’, as I now see them. At the same time, the label that was attached to my photos very early on is proving stubborn. The same clichés keep on turning up in article after article. Admittedly, I still don’t make optimistic, colourful pictures, but I still believe I’m doi…

INTERVIEW: “Conversation with Dirk Braeckman” (1998)

INTERVIEW: Walker Evans – “The Thing Itself is Such a Secret and so Unapproachable” (1974)

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…unes of Depression times, but your photographs are not critical. I find them more of a glorification—glorification of the plain and simple reality. W.E.: I’m pleased to hear you say that, because I didn’t like the label that I unconsciously earned of being a social protest artist. I never took it upon myself to change the world. And those contemporaries of mine who were going around falling for the idea that they were going to bring d…

INTERVIEW: Walker Evans – “The Thing Itself is Such a Secret and so Unapproachable” (1974)

RICHARD AVEDON: “Listening to Avedon” (1995)

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…ic integrity while admitting that everything he has accomplished as a creative artist depends on the participation of others. Demanding that he be seen as an artist is nothing new for Avedon; he has spent decades fighting the label “fashion photographer.” This is partly because it is important for him to claim his own identity as a photographic artist as opposed to a constantly compromised and therefore non-existent individual associa…

RICHARD AVEDON: “Listening to Avedon” (1995)