2015-02-25

Exhibition dates: 31st October 2014 – 19th April 2015

Another fun posting to add to the archive!

Marcus

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Many thankx to the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

Charles “Teenie” Harris (1908-1998)
Three men and three women, seated as couples in banquette in bar or restaurant advertising “Fried Shrimp Plate $.85″ and “1/4 Fried Chicken $.70″

c. 1959; printed 2001

Silver gelatin print

Gift of Arlette and Gus Kayafas

Charles “Teenie” Harris (1908-1998)
Photographer taking picture of Muhammad Ali (Cassius Clay) possibly in Carlton House Hotel, Downtown

1963; printed 2001

Silver gelatin print

Gift of Arlette and Gus Kayafas

Charles “Teenie” Harris photographed the African-American community of his hometown of Pittsburgh, primarily for the Pittsburgh Courier, the preeminent national African-American newspaper (c. 1930-1960). Photographing community members, visiting political figures, athletes, and entertainers, Harris set out to bala nce negative views of African-Americans and their communities. Nicknamed “One-Shot,” Harris photographed confidently and with ease, rarely asking his subjects to pose more than once. The resulting 80,000 negatives make up one of the largest collections of photographs of a black urban community in the United States. Harris’ artistic output helps define photography as a tool for preserving the past, his photographs serving as invaluable documentation of the spirit of a par ticular time, place, and people.

Prefiguring the paparazzi images of celebrities that pervade contemporary media, Harris’ photographs of singer/actress Lena Horne and boxer Cassius Clay (Muhammad Ali) capture his famous subjects in relaxed settings that humanize them. Furthermore, Harris’ photograph of Clay shows the boxer having his portrait taken by another photographer, giving Harris’ image of a photograph-in-process an even greater behind-the-scenes feel.

Jules Aarons (1921-2008)
School Yard, Boston
1950

Gelatin silver print

15 7/16 x 19 15/16″ (39.2 x 50.6 cm)

Gift of the photographer

Jules Aarons (1921-2008)
The Waiting, Boston
1952

Gelatin silver print, 15 7/16 x 19 15/16″ (39.2 x 50.6 cm)

Gift of the photographer

© 2015 Jules Aarons

Jules Aarons (1921-2008)
Untitled (Bronx), from the portfolio In The Jewish Neighborhoods 1946-76

c. 1970; printed 2003

Silver gelatin print, printer’s proof II

Gift of Arlette and Gus Kayafas

Jules Aarons was one of the most respected and prolific American social documentary photographers in the twentieth century. His street photography captured personal moments in the public eye within the urban neighborhoods in which he lived: the Bronx, where he was born and raised, and Boston, where he spent the majority of his adult life. Shot with his twin lens Rolleiflex camera held at waist-level, Aarons’ images are casual, intimate, and lively. Although the artist did not personally know his subjects, his work does not exhibit the detachment found in earlier forms of social documentary photography. His deep associations with the places and people he photographed imbue his images with a warmth and familiarity.

Greg Schmigel (b.1969)
Subway Triptych

2011

Digital photographic prints

Courtesy of the artist

Greg Schmigel (b.1969)
An Afternoon in the Sun

2012

Digital photographic prints

Courtesy of the artist

Greg Schmigel (b.1969)
Ideal Hosiery
2013

Digital photographic prints

Courtesy of the artist

Greg Schmigel (b.1969)
Late Day On Broadway

2012

Digital photographic prints

Courtesy of the artist

Greg Schmigel (b.1969)
This Isn’t Fucking Paris

2012

Digital photographic prints

Courtesy of the artist

Greg Schmigel works in the vernacular of mid-twentieth century black and white street photography, capturing candid glimpses of everyday moments. While inspired by pioneering artists such as Jules Aarons, whose work is also on view in this gallery, Schmigel creates photographs with a decidedly twenty-first century quality. A mobile photographer since 2007, his device of choice is the most itinerant and convenient camera available: his iPhone. In his work, Schmigel emphasizes that the production of a good photograph is due mainly to the eye of the photographer, and not necessarily dependent on the equipment he uses.

By producing black and white prints from his digital images, the artist casts a timeless aura over contemporary scenes. In photographs such as Ideal Hosiery, the faded signs of a New York City street corner provide an uncanny setting that could easily be found in a photograph taken many decades ago. In other images, however, the omnipresence of smartphones in the hands of pedestrians instantly signals the twenty-first century. In these photographs, Schmigel aptly captures the ironic isolation caused by the very technology created to increase interpersonal communication.

“Presented at a time when the compulsion to digitally document and share human activity has increased exponentially, this exhibition features works from deCordova’s permanent collection that prefigure and inform current trends in social photography, as well as recent work by contemporary artists who utilize smartphones and social media to record the world around them. The Social Medium features work spanning from the mid-twentieth century to the present, and includes multiple photographic genres such as social documentary, street, society/celebrity, and portrait photography.

The Social Medium was largely inspired by a recent gift of one of Andy Warhol’s Little Red Books, which contains a set of color Polaroids. With his camera, Warhol documented the events of his life – from glamorous celebrity parties to mundane occurrences. The arrival of these photographs, which record Warhol’s artistic and social m ilieu (or environment), created an opportunity to examine the work of other artists who also photograph social experience. Together, the images in this exhibition speak to the continued relevance of the photographic medium’s singular power to capture and preserve personal and societal histories, and provide a selective history of the camera’s role as an extension of memory and a tool that is at once a witness to and participant in human social activity.”

Text from the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum

Eugene Richards (b.1944)
First Communion, Dorchester

1976

Silver gelatin print

Gift of the artist

Eugene Richards captures a specific, local community in which he was embedded, to offer us uncanny views of small-town America. In the 1970s, Richards returned to his native Boston neighborhood and produced photographs such as First Communion, which would later comprise his seminal book, Dorchester Days (1978). Richards documented a small section of urban Boston at a time when racial tensions and economic decline were defining Dorchester along with swaths of American cities and towns in similar states of transition and decline. First Communion captures a moment that nods towards social frictions at large, where religious traditions and street life converge in ambiguously innocent tension.

Larry Fink (b. 1941)
N.Y.C. Club Cornich, from the portfolio 82 Photographs 1974 to 1982

1977; printed 1983

Silver gelatin print, 28/30

Gift of Diane and Eric Pearlman

Larry Fink (b. 1941)
N.Y.C. Club Cornich, from the portfolio 82 Photographs 1974 to 1982

1977; printed 1983

Silver gelatin print, 28/30

Gift of Diane and Eric Pearlman

Larry Fink (b. 1941)
Peter Beard’s, East Hampton, from the portfolio 82 Photographs 1974 to 1982

1982; printed 1983

Silver gelatin print, 28/30

Gift of Diane and Eric Pearlman

Larry Fink is a prominent American photographer who is best known for capturing images of high-profile social events. Fink’s images from the 1970s and 1980s capture individual vignettes within social gatherings, and nod to the development of documentary photography within the image-driven culture of the second half of the twentieth century. These photographs from Fink’s series 82 Photographs 1974 to 1982 and Making Out 1957 – 1980 depict scenes from clubs and parties in and around New York City. Fink’s subjects are caught off-guard by his camera, and their expressions provide windows into their weariness or giddy party euphoria. Capturing groups and individuals at surprisingly intimate and vulnerable moments, his photographs subtly reveal the disconnect often found between a subject’s public image and his or her inner self. For example, in Peter Beard’s, East Hampton, Fink captures a dynamic group of people in various levels of engagement with one another. While some are intertwined, others glance outward to the party beyond, having seemingly lost interest in the gathering at hand.

Tod Papageorge (b.1940)
Studio 54

1977

Silver gelatin print

Gift of Pete and Constance Kayafas

In this photograph, Tod Papageorge captures revelers in gritty black and white, employing straightforward photog raphy to show significant, poetic moments from everyday life. Highlighted by the timeless quality of a silver gelatin print, his photograph of partygoers at the infamous New York City nightclub, Studio 54, captures such a scene. Dramatic without arranging its subjects, Papageorge’s photograph freezes the precise moment just before the woman’s upstretched hand makes contact with balloon floating wistfully above her head.

Phillip Maisel (b. 1981)
Wall Photos, from the series A More Open Place

2010

Archival inkjet print

Courtesy of the artist

Phillip Maisel (b. 1981)
Profile Pictures (4702), from the series A More Open Face

2011

Archival inkjet print

Courtesy of the artist

Phillip Maisel’s photographs are layered, ethereal images that evoke the fleeting nature of memories. Though nostalgic in tone, these images derive from a very contemporary source. Setting long exposures on his camera, the artist captures the images appearing on his computer screen as he clicked through his friends’ Facebook albums. The resulting picture-of-pictures is twice removed from its source, emphasizing the swollen state of image culture and the manner in which digital images are created, uploaded, and discarded at an ever increasing rate.

The title of these series derives from Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, who noted that, through the social media platform, he was trying “to make the world a more open place.” Facebook and other sites have certainly achieved that; however, this extreme openness, the compulsion to over-share personal images and information, creates a paradox given the subsequent lack of privacy inherent in these activities. Maisel’s work comments on this contemporary phenomenon in which individuals willingly share images of their private memories in public venues. Furthermore, by reducing a collection of images to a single photograph, the artist manifests the compression of time and space in the internet age. This layering of images is also a form of erasure; each new image obscures the last, consistently degrading the significance of each individual picture and memory.

Neal Slavin (b. 1941)
Capitol Wrestling Corporation, Washington, D.C ., from the portfolio Groups in America

1979

Color coupler print, 60/75

Gift of Stephen L. Singer and Linda G. Singer

Neal Slavin is acclaimed for his group portraits, which range from corporate associates to recreational cohorts to families. The photographs on display offer astute yet humorous studies of groups with specific shared interests that lay at the edges of societal norms. In Slavin’s images, no single member of the group pulls focus from the others and the ultimate personality of the portrait hinges upon the collective aura.

Andy Warhol (1928-1987)
The Little Red Book 128

1972

Twenty Polacolor Type 108 Polaroid prints

Gift of The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. 2014

Examples of Polaroids in book. 20 total.

During the 1970s and early 1980s, Andy Warhol used the Polaroid color film camera. A then-novel technology which developed photographs in a matter of seconds, he employed it to document the events of his life – from the most glamorous celebrity parties to the most mundane and inconsequential occurrences. Warhol catalogued many of these photographs into small red Holston Polaroid albums, consequently known as Little Red Books. DeCordova’s Little Red Book 128, recently donated to the museum by The Warhol Foundation, features twenty photographs from a day in 1972 that Warhol shared with acclaimed writer Truman Capote, socialite Lee Radziwill and her family, and his business associates Vincent Fremont, Fred Hughes, and Jed Johnson. Consisting of both staged portraits and casual snapshots, the book is part paparazzi portfolio and part quaint family album.

Throughout the height of his fame, Andy Warhol was rarely without a camera in hand. The enigmatic artist often preferred social situations to be passively mitigated by his camera lens, rather than experienced physically and emotionally. In many ways, Warhol’s detachment mirrors a contemporary reliance on electronic forms of communication that limit human contact. Warhol once said, “In the future, everyone will be world – famous for 15 minutes.” Unsurprisingly, in all his work and in this collection of Polaroids, the artist blurs the lines between public/private and commoner/celebrity in a manner which is eerily prophetic of current social media platforms, such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, among others, which allow anyone and everyone to have their Warholian 15 minutes of fame, or perhaps even just 15 seconds of infamy.

Andy Warhol (1928-1987)
Anthony Radziwill

1972

Polacolor Type 108 Polaroid print

Prince Anthony Stanislaw Albert Radziwill (4 August 1959 – 10 August 1999) was an American television executive and filmmaker.

Born in Lausanne, Switzerland, Radziwill was the son of socialite/actress Caroline Lee Bouvier (younger sister of First Lady Jacqueline Lee Bouvier) and Polish Prince Stanisław Albrecht Radziwiłł. He married a former ABC colleague, Emmy Award-winning journalist Carole Ann DiFalco, on 27 August 1994 on Long Island, New York.

As a member of the Radziwills, one of Central Europe’s noble families, Anthony Radziwill was customarily accorded the title of Prince and styled His Serene Highness, although he never used it. He descended from King Frederick William I of Prussia, King George I of Great Britain, and King John III Sobieski of Poland. The family’s vast hereditary fortune was lost during World War II, and Anthony’s branch of the family emigrated to England, where they became British subjects.

Radziwill’s career began at NBC Sports, as an associate producer. During the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, he contributed Emmy Award-winning work. In 1989, he joined ABC News as a television producer for Prime Time Live. In 1990, he won thePeabody Award for an investigation on the resurgence of Nazism in the United States. Posthumously, Cancer: Evolution to Revolution was awarded a Peabody. His work was nominated for two Emmys.

Around 1989 he was diagnosed with testicular cancer, undergoing treatment which left him sterile, but in apparent remission. However, shortly before his wedding, new tumors emerged. Radziwill battled metastasizing cancer throughout his five years of marriage, his wife serving as his primary caretaker through a succession of oncologists, hospitals, operations and experimental treatments. The couple lived in New York, and both Radziwill and his wife tried to maintain their careers as journalists between his bouts of hospitalization. During this period, Radziwill became especially close to his aunt Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, who was also terminally ill with cancer. He died on 10 August 1999, and was survived by his sister, Anna Christina Radziwill. (Wikipedia)

Andy Warhol (1928-1987)
Lee Radziwill
1972

Polacolor Type 108 Polaroid print

Andy Warhol (1928-1987)
Jed Johnson
1972

Polacolor Type 108 Polaroid print

Jed Johnson (December 30, 1948 – July 17, 1996) was an American interior designer and film director. Initially hired by Andy Warhol to sweep floors at Warhol’s Factory, he subsequently moved in with Warhol and became his lover. As a passenger in the First Class cabin, he was killed when TWA Flight 800 exploded shortly after takeoff in 1996.

Andy Warhol (1928-1987)
Truman Capote
1972

Polacolor Type 108 Polaroid print

deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum

51 Sandy Pond Rd, Lincoln, MA

01773, United States
Tel: +1 781-259-8355

Opening hours:
Summer
Every day

10 am – 5 pm

deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum website

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Filed under: American, american photographers, black and white photography, colour photography, digital photography, documentary photography, exhibition, existence, gallery website, intimacy, light, memory, New York, photographic series, photography, photojournalism, Polaroid photography, portrait, psychological, reality, space, street photography, time, works on paper Tagged: 82 Photographs 1974 to 1982, A More Open Face, A More Open Place, American urban photography, An Afternoon in the Sun, andy warhol, Andy Warhol The Little Red Book, black urban community, Capitol Wrestling Corporation, Cassius Clay, Charles "Teenie" Harris, Charles "Teenie" Harris Photographer taking picture of Muhammad Ali, Charles "Teenie" Harris Three men and three women, Charles "Teenie" Harris Three men and three women seated as couples in banquette, commoner/celebrity, deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum, Eugene Richards First Communion, First Communion, Greg Schmigel, Greg Schmigel An Afternoon in the Sun, Greg Schmigel Ideal Hosiery, Greg Schmigel Late Day On Broadway, Greg Schmigel Subway Triptych, Greg Schmigel This Isn't Fucking Paris, Groups in America, Holston Polaroid albums, Ideal Hosiery, In The Jewish Neighborhoods 1946-76, iPhone, iPhone photography, Jules Aarons Bronx, Jules Aarons In The Jewish Neighborhoods 1946-76, Jules Aarons School Yard Boston, Jules Aarons The Waiting, Larry Fink, Larry Fink 82 Photographs 1974 to 1982, Larry Fink N.Y.C. Club Cornich, Larry Fink Peter Beard's East Hampton, Late Day On Broadway, Lena Horne, Lena Horne reflected in mirror in dressing room, Lena Horne reflected in mirror in dressing room at Stanley Theatre, Little Red Books, Muhammad Ali, N.Y.C. Club Cornich, Neal Slavin Capitol Wrestling Corporation, Neal Slavin Groups in America, New York City street corner, Peter Beard, Peter Beard's East Hampton, Phillip Maisel, Phillip Maisel A More Open Face, Phillip Maisel A More Open Place, Phillip Maisel Profile Pictures, Phillip Maisel Wall Photos, Photographer taking picture of Muhammad Ali, Polacolor Type 108, Polaroid color film camera, Polaroids, Profile Pictures, public/private, School Yard Boston, small-town America, social documentary photography, social media platforms, social photography, Studio 54, Subway Triptych, The Little Red Book, The Social Medium, The Waiting Boston, This Isn't Fucking Paris, Three men and three women seated as couples in banquette in bar or restaurant, Tod Papageorge, Tod Papageorge Studio 54, urban photography, Wall Photos, Warhol Little Red Books

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