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Garry Winogrand at the National Gallery of Art

April 2, 2014 By Caroline Space

Garry Winogrand, Los Angeles, 1964
Garry Winogrand, Los Angeles, 1964

The National Gallery of Art is currently hosting, through June 8, the first retrospective in 25 years of American photographer Garry Winogrand. Upon his death in 1984, Winogrand still had 4,100 film rolls yet to be developed, leaving a great deal of his body of work unseen, and as a result many of the silver gelatin prints in this expansive exhibition are printed posthumously.

Winogrand’s photographs follow the moments of everyday American life, exhibiting a booming nation of prosperity and “coolness,” while hints of destruction linger in the foreground. He traveled the country capturing both city and suburban lives, combining hope and aspiration with anxiety and instability in mid-century America. There are visions of idealized elegant social happenings like in Metropolitan Opera, that shift to the gritty change in culture, in Los Angeles, 1964, a decade later. His images map a change in American culture between World War II and the insecurities citizens felt during the Vietnam War. Frequently Winogrand’s images emerge as faintly unconscious attempts to impersonate the glamour and sophistication of commercial photography, particularly the photographs he made during the mid-twentieth century.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Review Tagged With: american photography, Garry Winogrand, National Gallery of Art

Chris Anthony’s Venice at Randall Scott Projects

February 4, 2014 By Caroline Space

 

- Chris Anthony, Venice no.18
– Chris Anthony, Venice no.18, 2009

Chris Anthony’s Venice, showing at Randall Scott Projects through February 22, is an exploration into photography as an ambiguous narrative—the beauty of the images isn’t what they seem. He’s trying to create a story through a type of stage production, where the viewer is given the actor and a selection of props. Anthony writes, “Relationships are made within the scene and a ‘play’ develops in which the viewer becomes the playwright.”

In Venice, Anthony substitutes the traditional, draped theatrical stage and synthesized scenery for the chilling ocean and vast sky. His players perform on the shoreline, highlighting his “underlying theme [of] a society that has developed in and on water”. This is the Venice of Italy and the beach in California; the series was shot in both.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Review Tagged With: Chris Anthony, RandallScottProjects, review, Venice

The Hirshhorn’s “Damage Control: Art and Destruction Since 1950”

December 5, 2013 By Caroline Space

Jeff Wall, The Destroyed Room, 1978. Glenstone.
Jeff Wall, The Destroyed Room, 1978. Glenstone.

Damage Control: Art and Destruction Since 1950 at the Hirshhorn spans from World War II to the present, covering the destructive theme through artistic interpretation. The enormous exhibit can be broken down into media types: installation, new media, painting, and photography. The first time I visited, I focused on the video art to see how new media plays a role in how we understand destruction. During my last visit, I looked at how the photographs act as virtual realities of devastation. Aside from a few pieces — Arnold Odermatt’s series of car crashes and Gordon Matta-Clark’s “Window Blown Out” from 1976 — the images are enormous. It felt as if I could walk into each chaotic environment I was looking at. But the photographs also call to question its function as a medium.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Review Tagged With: Ai Weiwei, Arnold Odermatt, art, Damage Control, Damage Control: Art and Destruction Since 1950, Destruction, fine art, Gordon Matta-Clark, Jeff Wall, Luc Delahaye, review, Thomas Demand, Thomas Ruff, Walead Beshty

How Was This Year’s FotoWeekDC Festival?

November 14, 2013 By Heather Goss

InstantDC at FotoNOMA by Joe Flood
InstantDC at FotoNOMA by Joe Flood

FotoWeekDC just closed its sixth annual international photography festival last weekend. Like any large event that tries to be inclusive of an entire community, it has both lovers and haters. One common complaint – that it didn’t focus enough on local photography – was addressed this year with FotoNOMA, which hosted work from a number of D.C. groups like InstantDC and the STRATA Collective. No one can get to all the exhibits, lectures, and workshops that FotoWeekDC offers each year, so we asked some of you what your favorite – and least favorite – parts were:

Jeff Norman:

I loved the whole FotoNOMA exhibition, but I think the women from WPOW had many strong images the invoked a lot emotion. And the Private Moon in America series from photographer Leonid Tishkov was brilliant! I also loved the images from the photographers from Strata Collective.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Review Tagged With: 2013, Chris Williams, DC FStop Professional Photography Group, FotoDC, FotoNOMA, FotoWeek, FotoWeekDC, jeff Norman, Jessica Del Vecchio, Sarah Hodzic, Tatiana Gulenkina

FotoWeek DC – What We Want to See

October 18, 2013 By Meaghan Gay

H Street Festival by Patrick Wright
H Street Festival by Patrick Wright

FotoWeek DC is just around the corner. There’s a wide variety of events and exhibits to choose from, but these selections are on the chalkboard here at Exposed DC headquarters. We’re sharing our picks now because many of them require reservations, so don’t miss out!

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Review Tagged With: Events, Exhibits, Festival, FotoWeek DC

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