Stephen Shore. (Portfolio).At the age of twenty-five, Stephen Shore set off by car from his native Manhattan and headed west. The year was 1972, and the America he discovered though the lens of his 35 mm range finder, a vast network of windswept wind·swept adj. Exposed to or swept by winds: windswept moors. windswept Adjective 1. back roads and empty downtowns, would inspire him to crisscross the country some ten more times during the decade that followed. By his second outing a year later, Shore had traded in the 35 millimeter for a 4 x 5 (a slower, more exacting large-format camera, later replaced by an even bulkier 8 x 10), initiating the seminal document of the American vernacular that would come to be known as Uncommon Places, after the title of the 1982 Aperture collection. The large-plate view camera was the signature tool of nineteenth-century American survey photographers like William Henry Jackson
William Henry Jackson (April 41843 - June 301942) was an American painter, photographer and explorer famous for his images of the American West. and Timothy O'Sullivan, who employed the format to record (and promote) the western landscape as a kind of uninhabited sublime. Shore's use is in part homage, but an homage complicated. In a photograph such as 5th Street & Broadway, Eureka, CA, 9/24/74, Shore places us above an empty intersection, near a parking lot festive with automobiles, where a racial slur in faded circus colors doubles as a corporate logo. A pocket of urban sprawl depicted with the epic clarity and sense of scale once reserved for natural wonders, Shore's image introduces color (then associated only with the snapshot and the ad), amplifying the location's lurid markers of consumption. Shore's work, traditionally assessed within a framework of aesthetic formalism, has been mistaken--like the photography of Walker Evans before it--for simply an exploration of the beauty in the banal. (His examinations of urban space owe a debt to, but differ from, earlier investigations by Robert Frank and Garry Winogrand, who relied on a rich cast of contrasting characters to construct their theaters of social anomie anomie, a social condition characterized by instability, the breakdown of social norms, institutional disorganization, and a divorce between socially valid goals and available means for achieving them. .) Less often discussed is Shore's nuanced contribution to the post-Pop investigations of the late '60s. In Uncommon Places, he not only brings the lessons of his contemporaries Douglas Huebler, Ed Ruscha, and Dan Graham to the twentieth-century American photographic tradition, but also integrates Pop's disengaged dis·en·gage v. dis·en·gaged, dis·en·gag·ing, dis·en·gag·es v.tr. 1. To release from something that holds fast, connects, or entangles. See Synonyms at extricate. 2. signifiers--turning an eye trained by a stint at Warhol's Factory on an increasingly homogenized ho·mog·e·nize v. ho·mog·e·nized, ho·mog·e·niz·ing, ho·mog·e·niz·es v.tr. 1. To make homogeneous. 2. a. To reduce to particles and disperse throughout a fluid. b. United States--with Conceptual art's flirtation with the typological. Defining an American architectural vernacular at the dawn of globalization globalization Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation , Shore's photographs prefigure pre·fig·ure tr.v. pre·fig·ured, pre·fig·ur·ing, pre·fig·ures 1. To suggest, indicate, or represent by an antecedent form or model; presage or foreshadow: the Dusseldorf school's serial explorations of contemporary consumerism (indeed, Thomas Struth titled his first book Unconscious Places). Shore self-consciously employed traditional genres--the portrait and the landscape--to suggest that the American West, historically the most potent symbol of American freedom and will, was fast becoming a commodified wasteland. As if to literalize lit·er·al·ize tr.v. lit·er·al·ized, lit·er·al·iz·ing, lit·er·al·iz·es To make literal. Verb 1. literalize - make literal; "literalize metaphors" literalise the depleted de·plete tr.v. de·plet·ed, de·plet·ing, de·pletes To decrease the fullness of; use up or empty out. [Latin d agency of the mass-cultural subject, Shore presents concreteclad office buildings, parking lots stretching to the horizon, and candy-colored sedans whose occupants and owners seem to have vanished, only to resurface re·sur·face v. re·sur·faced, re·sur·fac·ing, re·sur·fac·es v.tr. To cover with a new surface: resurfacing a road; resurfaced the floor. v.intr. in his portraits. With the publication of Aperture's Uncommon Places: The Complete Works (spring 2004)--six never-before-published highlights are presented here--Shore's prescient document will finally be available in all its breadth and complexity. --WALEAD BESHTY In 1971 at the age of twenty-four, STEPHEN SHORE became the first living photographer honored with a solo exhibition at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art. Widely exhibited and published, his works are collected in a number of volumes, including American Surfaces (Schirmer/Mosel, 1999), The Velvet Years: Warhol's Factory, 1965-67(Thunder's Mouth Press, 1995), and The Gardens at Giverny: A View of Monet's World (Aperture, 1983). In September, his work will appear in an exhibition at 303 Gallery, New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of , and forty-five of his photographs are to be included in Tate Modern's "Cruel and Tender: The Real in the Twentieth-Century Photograph," opening June 5. Since 1982 Shore has directed the photography program at Bard College, where he is Susan Weber Soros Susan Weber Soros (born 1954, New York City, U.S.) is the founder and director of the Bard Graduate Center (BGC) for studies in the decorative arts, design, and culture in New York City. She was married to George Soros. Professor in the Arts. His celebrated collection Uncommon Places (Aperture, 1982) will be revisited next spring by Aperture in an expanded edition that will include more than one hundred previously unpublished photographs. For this issue, Shore presents a po rtfolio of six of those images from the mid-'70s. Walead Eleshty provides an introduction. |
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