Nicholas Nixon
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Born in 1947 in Détroit, Michigan (US)
Lives and works in Cambridge, Massachussets (US) |
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Clementine and Sam, Cambridge
1988
Black and white photograph, gelatin-silver print 20 x 25 cm Purchased in: 1991 |
Nicholas Nixon is a virtuoso when it comes to large-format cameras, the favourite medium of American photographers of the ‘Straight Photography’ school, who clustered around Alfred Stieglitz. He produces documentary-type series in which is expressed a powerful social involvement linked with an intimacy with the subject. In 1975 or thereabouts, he started to photograph architecture and landscapes (1976, exhibition at the MoMA with 40 photographs of Boston), which he quickly abandoned in favour of people. The Front Porch series, worked on between 1977 and 1982, was exhibited and published by the MoMA; it shows families in the southern states photographed on the porches of their homes, in that intermediate place between private and public, where connivence and violence in social relations become friends. This initial series triggered a work about closeness, the identity of bodies, family relations (The Brown Sisters, a series started in 1975, Family Pictures – pictures of the artist’s family -, etc.) age, time, and death (series on old age, Aids victims, handicapped persons…) in which Nixon tracks down the ephemeral beauty of the subject, the contacts and the marks left by the passage of time. Maïté Vissault |
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