PAUL
STRAND SOUTHWEST
Photograps by Paul Strand
Hardbound, 9.5" x 11.5" 112 pages
50 duotone and 45 four-color illustrations
2004, Aperture
Text by Rebecca Busselle and Trudy Wilner
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From the publisher:
For Paul Strand, the great pioneer of modernism, the summers of
1926 and 1930–1932 were a return to experimentation and
periods of great artistic growth. He worked in makeshift darkrooms—one
in a hotel basement and another above the Taos movie theater.
The Southwest period brought not only artistic renewal, but also
personal turmoil. His political and social ideas were shifting,
and his relationship with the two most important people in his
life—his wife Rebecca and his mentor Alfred Stieglitz—were
disintegrating. This book reconstructs, in an intimate, visual
way, the emotional and creative swirl around Paul Strand, through
beautiful reproductions of his images from the period and a comprehensive
collection of notes, illustrations, and ephemera.
While a handful of Strand’s Southwest photographs
have been previously published, this period of his outstanding
career remains largely unexplored. Paul Strand Southwest
presents many images for the first time, including dramatic landscapes,
decayed ghost towns, the noble architecture of adobe churches,
and his final, austere portraits of Rebecca.
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