Bill Owens.AMERICAN FINE ARTS Though conspicuously absent from public collections, Bill Owens' photo-chronicles of middle America Middle America 1 A region of southern North America comprising Mexico, Central America, and sometimes the West Indies. Middle American adj. & n. belong alongside those of the better known "social landscape" photographers of the '60s and '70s: Diane Arbus Diane Arbus (March 14, 1923 – July 26, 1971) was an American photographer, noted for her portraits of people on the fringes of society. Early life Diane Nemerov , Bruce Davidson Perhaps you mean:
Friedlander studied photography at the Art Center of Los Angeles. , and Gary Winogrand. Why Owens has slipped through the net is hard to tell. Admittedly Owens' subject--the quotidian quotidian /quo·tid·i·an/ (kwo-tid´e-an) recurring every day; see malaria. quo·tid·i·an adj. Recurring daily. Used especially of attacks of malaria. as sanctified sanc·ti·fy tr.v. sanc·ti·fied, sanc·ti·fy·ing, sanc·ti·fies 1. To set apart for sacred use; consecrate. 2. To make holy; purify. 3. in form and ritual--lacks the instantaneous allure or fashion quotient of Davidson's subcultures or Arbus' freak shows. Also perhaps the texts that often accompany his images work better in the book form of Suburbia, 1968-72, Working (I do it for the Money), 1974-75, and Our Kind of People, 1969-74 (now out of print) than they do on gallery walls. None of which adequately explains the fact that this was his first solo show after nearly two decades of art-world indifference during which Owens all but stopped taking photographs. The collected photographs and texts provide both a tender and sociologically astute portrait of middle America in the late '60s and early '70s. Six years of photojournalism in the Bay Area not only honed Owens' sense of the decisive moment but also afforded him direct contact with the new backbone of America: the culture that grew out of the tens of thousands of tract homes built in the '50s and '60s. In the suburbs he recorded the pioneers of a new culture based on the celebration of prosperity and the invention of social mores. A boy astride a·stride adv. 1. With a leg on each side: riding astride. 2. With the legs wide apart. prep. 1. On or over and with a leg on each side of. 2. the sole tree in a grassy island all but engulfed by asphalt and concrete defoliates it leaf by leaf in anticipation of the fall: "My father thinks its a good idea . . . I think he's crazy." Capturing the neutral humor of the strange made routine, Owens refuses the satirical savagery often used to color depictions of the suburbs. A mother and son worthy of a Mike Leigh movie, pose proudly in a front room featuring an audacious display of Italian sirocco sirocco (sərŏk`ō) [Ital., from Arab. sharq=east], hot, dust-laden, dry, southerly wind originating in the N African desert (most commonly in the spring) and reaching Italy and nearby Mediterranean areas. floral designs over a Palos Verde rock fireplace. But the camera is never used as a lepidopterist's pin: the evident willingness of his subjects to be photographed indicates less a pretension Pretension See also Hypocrisy. Prey (See QUARRY.) Pride (See BOASTFULNESS, EGOTISM, VANITY.) Absolon vain, officious parish clerk. [Br. Lit. to uniqueness than the satisfaction of the disenfranchised in rejoining the community of representation. What is shocking about these works is precisely the invisibility of the culture that they portray. It is a landscape of generalized eccentricity, inhabited by people neither fired by ambition nor fueled by repression. Exported from the city, the ideal of the utopian dwelling has been purged of history and been given expression in total-effect bedrooms, perfectly dusted figgle-leaf fig plants, and the religion of the here and now. Freedom here has no static or negative definition but is enshrined in instruments that possess the dual functions of leisure and locomotion--the boats, bikes, and RVs that fill the circular driveways and garages--and in the spectacle of transit: "Our home is built with the living room in the back, so in the evenings we sit out in front of the garage and watch traffic go by." Piercing the myth of freedom as mobility, Owens finds the kinetiC force of the metropolis reincarnated as the nuclear well-being of the suburbs. Recorded is an achieved utopia guarded by a new bourgeoisie, which, rather than having sold its soul to the devil of materialism, has just carpeted it wall-to-wall. Journeying into this deep-pile interior, Owens finds no heart of darkness--nothing sinister beneath the curlers, flammable slacks, and barbecue fetishes. Quietly and without proselytizing, the protagonists of the easy-does-it apocalypse perturb our enshrinement of urban angst and nonconformity non·con·form·i·ty n. pl. non·con·form·i·ties 1. a. Refusal or failure to conform to accepted standards, conventions, rules, or laws. b. . After all, it just might be the case that "the best way to help your city government and have fun is to come out on a Saturday morning and pull weeds in a median strip." |
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