Lee Friedlander
|
Born in 1934 in Aberdeen, Washington (US)
Lives and works in New York City, New York (US) |
|
Washington DC
1976
Black and white photograph, gelatin-silver print 28.5 x 19 cm Purchased in: 1991 |
Lee Friedlander, an admirer of Eugène Atget, is part of the tradition of photographers of American cityscapes, such as Walker Evans and Robert Frank. He puts his subjects into thematic groups: street, portrait, self-portrait, landscape, nude. His photos bear the mark of the instantaneousness, the immediacy of the shot, but without making concessions to a facile and sentimental reproduction of beings and things. Contrary to a direct confrontation, he strives toward a manner of presentation in book form – ‘Books are the best way of looking at photography’ (Lee Friedlander) which enables him to intervene with regard to the sense of reading, and create a narrative and an interaction between images, while leaving free rein to the viewer’s contemplation. Anne Langlois |
|
|