Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29547 views
1
2
3
4
5
6
A Year in the Life
7
8
Paul Strand
9
(1890-1976) enjoyed a long and prolific career spanning what amounts to five or
10
six generations in the compressed history of 20 th century
11
photography. In the last 60 of those years he made an impressive number of
12
worthy images, full of human dignity and topical picturesqueness and formal
13
achievement. Had those 60 years constituted his entire career, we could
14
relegate him to a historical back shelf along with so many other humanistic
15
pillars of midcentury photography, stalwarts of Life and The Family
16
of Man whose work today primarily inspires a nagging sense of duty.
17
18
For a couple of years in
19
his youth, however, Strand was a radical Modernist who made one startling
20
picture after another, progressing in giant leaps that apparently occurred
21
month to month. With dazzling speed he went from being a promising imitator to
22
discovering dozens of avenues that would be explored by others in the ensuing
23
decades. "Paul Strand: Circa 1916" is the appropriately dazzling record of that
24
period, gathering for the first time nearly all his surviving work of the
25
time--a mere 60-odd photographs--into a sort of time-lapse film of the process
26
of discovery. If you have ever wondered what inspiration might look like
27
graphically represented, this is the show to see.
28
29
Strand was a product of the progressive Jewish New York
30
middle class. His aunt was a pioneer of the then-new kindergarten movement, and
31
his education was completed at the Ethical Culture School, which prized the
32
rounding effects of training in practical skills, including--impressively for
33
the time--photography, taught by the great Lewis Hine. His postgraduate studies
34
took place at the New York Camera Club, a hobby league whose members were
35
doctors and lawyers less interested in art than in craft, and then he
36
gravitated toward the artistic forefront of the medium, namely, the
37
Pictorialists. This movement was just beginning to splinter. Under the
38
proprietary leadership of the photographer and all-around impresario Alfred
39
Stieglitz, the group had called itself Photo-Secession, which sounded radical
40
and daring, but Stieglitz was so obsessed with achieving artistic legitimacy
41
that the group's work restricted itself to counterfeiting the effects of
42
drawing and painting. The images were soft, vague studies of moony, "timeless"
43
subjects, maidens in dappled fields and the like. Edward Steichen was
44
particularly skilled at delivering prints that looked like daubings untouched
45
by any mechanical process and wholly innocent of the industrial world.
46
47
Soon erstwhile
48
Photo-Secessionists were chafing under the harness, but Strand immediately took
49
to the more conservative elements, and between 1911 and 1913 he produced
50
appropriately languid views of shimmering water; decorative sheep; and
51
unfocused, mildly erotic light effects. He was fascinated by the Japanese-print
52
flatness bequeathed by the Impressionists; in Maid of the Mist, Niagara
53
Falls (1915), he managed to cheat scale so much that the boat looks like a
54
bathtub toy against the swirl of rocks and spume. By the time he made that
55
picture, though, he had already taken in works by more venturesome
56
Pictorialists that showed the modern city as itself and had produced
57
Railroad Sidings, New York (1914): a couple of willful diagonals of
58
boxcars surmounted by a tangle of rails and a head of steam that has nothing to
59
do with mist.
60
61
Very soon he was touring the country, bringing back new
62
ideas about line and volume, as in Telegraph Poles, Texas (1915): some
63
stripped trees leaning over, bearing aloft a neat grid of wires, towering over
64
flatland and stumpy shacks. Nothing precious or European there, but a picture
65
that had never been made before (but would, in one way or another, be made
66
again and again by others over the next 50 years). Back in New York, Strand
67
started investigating the graphic dynamism at work in the shadows thrown down
68
by the el tracks, and he began seriously investing in the possibilities of the
69
overhead vantage, a Modernist urban trope he would will to Berenice Abbott and
70
sundry Germans and Russians. The scooped-out city canyon, embellished with a
71
frieze of human heads at the bottom (, 1915), was a theme that looked new in
72
the work of Gary Winogrand in the 1960s. The row of giant black rectangles
73
dominating puny pedestrians walking below ( Wall Street , 1915) inspired
74
numerous social interpretations, but to our eyes it might look like an
75
anticipation of obdurate monoliths by artists from Ad Reinhardt to Richard
76
Serra.
77
78
In the summer of 1916, Strand
79
went off to his family's country house in Twin Lakes, Conn., and there he
80
decided to take on the Cubism of Picasso and Braque using available materials.
81
He arranged bowls, jugs, and fruit in sunlight or whipped them with the shadows
82
of the porch railing, then left the objects alone and began rearranging the
83
position of his camera instead. The pictures become increasingly free; they can
84
almost be sequenced as a flipbook as they swing from still life to pure
85
abstraction and from the ground up toward dramatic diagonals in the sky. Back
86
in town again, he set about making portraits in the slums, arming himself with
87
a camera equipped with a false lens at a right angle to the actual one so he
88
could photograph unsuspecting subjects. The people--peddlers, drunks, sandwich
89
men--are observed not just as formal objects, although they are affected by
90
shadows and textures and sign-fragments, and not just as social types, as in
91
Hine's pictures, but also as complex, weathered personalities. Some of them,
92
such as Man, Five Points Square and the iconic Blind (both 1916),
93
are among the greatest photographic portraits ever, an accumulated life visible
94
all at once in their subjects' features.
95
96
Before his great surge gave
97
out in 1917, he had also begun photographing machinery--a hallmark of the work
98
of the two following decades in Europe and America--and he had also made a few
99
pictures that synthesized everything he had learned. Chief among these, in my
100
view, is From the Viaduct, New York (1916), a picture of a billboard, a
101
false front, a couple of roofs, a fence, and some people in the street that
102
marches the eye up one side and down the other, seamlessly blending all his
103
knowledge of light and shade, volume and flatness, geometry and the shapes of
104
letters, human proportion and the American scene. It has been hiding out all
105
these years in a private collection, a barely known monument of the most
106
liberating Modernism, the kind that the viewer can take out into the world to
107
transform its least prepossessing elements into jazz and verve. The same could
108
be said of the exhibition as a whole, and its splendid catalog: They animate a
109
process that, 80 years later, still seems new.
110
111
112
113
114
115