Stephen Shore: P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center.In 1972, aged twenty-four, Stephen Shore got into his car with a 35 mm Rollei camera and began a nearly two-year drive around the country taking pictures of an American culture at an impasse between abundance and ugliness. Back in New York, he had the film processed by a Kodak camera shop and showed the resulting color shots taped to the wall. They were apparently not much appreciated. Reprinted as slightly more precious five-by-seven-and-one-half-inch C-prints, uniformly matted and framed in white, 243 of these images were shown recently at P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center The P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center is one of the largest and oldest institutions in the United States dedicated solely to contemporary art. It is located in the neighborhood of Long Island City, Queens in New York City. . Collectively titled "American Surfaces," they ratified Shore's growing reputation as a pivotal figure in twentieth-century documentary photography. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] It's easy to see how Shore's fragmentary, deadpan road-movie stills--with their modest scale, encyclopedic scope, skewed angles, and abject subjects--would have looked weird in the early '70s, uncomfortably bastardizing Ruschaesque conceptualism conceptualism, in philosophy, position taken on the problem of universals, initially by Peter Abelard in the 12th cent. Like nominalism it denied that universals exist independently of the mind, but it held that universals have an existence in the mind as concept. , Vietnam-era fury, and Pop glam. But the lack of depth that "American Surfaces" records is of course as much emotional and political as it is physical or stylistic. Formally, Shore's pictures are deceptively simple, composed along rigorous orthogonals and pulsing with saturated but dreary color. Their persistent mode is a sultry and somehow viscous emptiness, in which places, people, and objects seem to be decomposing before the camera into a mishmash mish·mash n. A collection or mixture of unrelated things; a hodgepodge. [Middle English misse-masche, probably reduplication of mash, soft mixture; see mash. of unnatural textures. At the same time, the photographs openly court narrative. The subjects include gas stations, motel beds, hipster drinkers, bungalow facades, made-up girls, paunchy paunch·y adj. Having a potbelly. men, dogs, toilets, and TV dinners. Literally, the surfaces depicted include Formica, plate glass, metallic wallpaper, mirrored sunglasses, plaid wool, flowered nylon, and shag shag see cormorant. carpet; spiritually, the veneer is equal parts ennui, suspicion, and a sort of desperate, claustrophobic gentleness. Sheets, sinks, and magazines are equally dirty. The sign outside STRANGE DRUGS speaks for itself, as does the placard proclaiming in existentialist ex·is·ten·tial·ism n. A philosophy that emphasizes the uniqueness and isolation of the individual experience in a hostile or indifferent universe, regards human existence as unexplainable, and stresses freedom of choice and responsibility for the bad grammar NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY 'EVER.' Latent violence, or intimacy, hovers. In the overhead shot of a red carton of Borden milk on a blood red lacquered table, or the portrait of two beefy beefy, beefyness 1. in dog conformation, used to describe overdevelopment of musculature in the hindquarters. 2. in cattle, used to designate the desirable physical conformation of a beef animal, but an undesirable character in dairy cattle. old men sprawled on a loud green sofa--even in the snap of a laughing blonde in a blue shirt, her hair tousled on yellow pillows--Shore's America is unhealthy and distant, as if a nicotine-stained plastic screen stood not only between the photographer and his world, but between every American thing and all its neighbors. For contemporary viewers, the young Shore serves to connect visionaries of the street like Walker Evans, Robert Frank, and Garry Winogrand with raffish raff·ish adj. 1. Cheaply or showily vulgar in appearance or nature; tawdry. 2. Characterized by a carefree or fun-loving unconventionality; rakish. , fashion-conscious chroniclers of tribes like Larry Clark, Nan Goldin, and Wolfgang Tillmans. In this key position, as exhibition curator Bob Nickas points out in the catalogue and wall text, Shore is frequently mentioned vis-a-vis his generational cohort William Eggleston. But Shore has a grungier palette, and his attitude is druggier, quieter, wordier. Warhol is present as a constant refrigerator-like hum in the background of "American Surfaces," but there's a flicker of gonzo journalism here too. And in the reflective flatness and disorienting dis·o·ri·ent tr.v. dis·o·ri·ent·ed, dis·o·ri·ent·ing, dis·o·ri·ents To cause (a person, for example) to experience disorientation. Adj. 1. perspectives of Shore's compositions, as in the stupefied stu·pe·fy tr.v. stu·pe·fied, stu·pe·fy·ing, stu·pe·fies 1. To dull the senses or faculties of. See Synonyms at daze. 2. To amaze; astonish. yet wary stares of his subjects, one might even think wildly, fleetingly, of Manet. Both artists cast a jaundiced eye on modern life from the perspective of a flaneur-participant seduced by surface, defending himself only with his status as observer. Photography was famously important to the Parisian cynic, after all, and Olympia or the Folies-Bergere barmaid could turn up in Shore's Durango, Colorado, or Oklahoma City and fit right in. |
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