UNCOMMON
PLACES THE COMPLETE WORKS
Stephen Shore
Hardbound,
10.25" x 11.75", 180 pages
140 four-color images
2004, Aperture
Interview by Lynne Tillman
Essay by Stephan Schmidt-Wulffen
Published by Aperture in 1982 and long unavailable,
Stephen Shore’s legendary Uncommon Places has influenced
a generation of photographers. Among the first artists to take
color beyond advertising and fashion photography, Shore’s
large-format color work on the American vernacular landscape stands
at the root of what has become a vital photographic tradition.
Uncommon Places: The Complete Works presents a definitive
collection of the original series, much of it never before published
or exhibited.
Like Robert Frank and Walker Evans before him,
Shore discovered a hitherto unarticulated version of America via
highway and camera. Approaching his subjects with cool objectivity,
Shore’s images retain precise internal systems of gestures
in composition and light through which the objects before his
lens assume both an archetypal aura and an ambiguously personal
importance. In contrast to Shore’s signature landscapes
with which “Un-common Places” is often associated,
this expanded survey reveals equally remarkable collections of
interiors and portraits.
As a new generation of artists expands on the
projects of the New Topographic and New Color photographers of
the seventies—Thomas Struth (whose first book was titled
Unconscious Places), Andreas Gursky, and Catherine Opie among
them—Uncommon Places: The Complete Works provides
a timely opportunity to reexamine the diverse implications of
Shore’s project and offers a fundamental primer for the
last thirty years of large-format color photography.
At age twelve, Stephen Shore’s work was
purchased by Edward Steichen for the Museum of Modern Art. At
twenty-four, he became the first living photographer to have a
one-man show at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Other
one-man show venues include the Museum of Modern Art, New York,
the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Kunsthalle Düsseldorf.
He has received two National Endowment for the Arts Grants and
a Guggenheim Foundation Grant, and has been the Chair of Bard
College’s photography department in upstate N.Y. since 1982.
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