Arrivals
& Departures: The Airport Pictures of Gary Winogrand
the photographs of Garry Winogrand
Edited by Alex Harris and Lee Friedlander.
Hardcover, 112 pages, 4 b&w, 86 duotones
2004,
Distributed Art Publishers
"If
Garry Winogrand photographed everything, all the time, as he is
famous for having done, his pictures of airports convey, despite
their dated hair styles and clothing, the many still very familiar
sights and spaces and sensations attached to air travel. Arriving
at an airport, checking baggage, watching other travelers amble,
walk, and sometimes rush by, luggage trailing and flailing and
neatly rolling along, passengers waiting forever on those long
rows of attached seats, friends and relatives greeting each other
and saying goodbye: everything that happened and stills happens
in these vast public spaces. Winogrand's airport photographs were
taken over a period of 25 years, with the first frame shot around
1958 and the last in 1983, just months before his death. In Winogrand's
archive at the Center for Creative Photography at the University
of Arizona in Tucson, there are hundreds of contact sheets containing
airport images, and over 1,100 prints of airplanes and airports
that Winogrand made during his lifetime. Edited by Alex Harris,
one of the first to publish selections from this body of work,
in DoubleTake magazine in 1996, and longtime friend and
colleague Lee Friendlander, The Airport Pictures of Garry
Winogrand assembles 86 of the photographer's most compelling,
never-before published images of travelers, flight attendants,
airport waiting rooms, airplanes on runways, and all the people
and places in between."
Winogrand was acutely sensitive to glances, gestures,
and body language, and especially to the implicit eroticism of
the camera's gaze. His inability to resist taking pleasure in
the sights of the world--his compulsive yen to capture on film
nearly everything he saw--is, in the end, what makes his images
irresistible. --Andy Grundberg
To this viewer [Winogrand] seems, in fact, the
central photographer of his generation. --John Szarkowski
For Garry, airplanes, like bridges and tunnels,
brought on a cold sweat. Probably he started photogrpahing seriously
at airports because he had made a few good pictures at times and
had recognized the airport as a way to assuage his own anxiety
about the coming plane trip. He would arrive at the airport very
early so as to have time to watch and then get lost in his work.
What was reaped was the rich bounty held between these book covers.
--Lee Friedlander
Book
order form
Born in 1928
in New York, Garry Winogrand began photographing while in the
United States Air Force. His first one-man exhibition was held
in 1960 in New York, and he was given a solo showing at the Museum
of Modern Art, New York, just three years later; landmark group
exhibitions in which he took part include Toward a Social Landscape
and New Documents. Winogrand received a Guggenheim fellowship
in 1964, which led him to photograph extensively in California
and the American Southwest; another, in 1969, began a period of
work concerned with the effect of the media on public events.
Published portfolios of his work include The Animals, Stock
Photographs: Fort Worth Fat Stock Show and Rodeo, and The Man
in the Crowd. Garry Winogrand died in 1984.
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