GREGORY CREWDSON
1985-2005
Hardbound,
11¾" x 10",
200 pages
80 color and 100 black and white
illustrations
2005, Hatje Cantz
Edited by Stephan Berg
Essays by Martin Hentschel, Martin Hochleitner, Urs Stahel and
Stephan Berg
From the Publisher:
In his own words, Gregory Crewdson says,
“I am drawn to photography by some irrational need to create
an image of a perfect world. I strive to create that perfection
through obsessive detailing, through a weird kind of realist vision.
When the mystery of the photography emerges, my irrational need
to create a perfect world meets up with some kind of failure to
do so. This collision between failure and compulsion to make something
perfect creates an anxiety that interests me.” Crewdson
creates a world of perpetual loneliness, of lucid dreams based
in reality but not real. The subjects seem detached, alone, isolated.
The title of Stephan Berg’ s essay, “The Dark Side
of the American Dream,” encapsulates Crewdson’s vision.
This wonderfully produced book is
published in conjunction with the first European retrospective
of Crewdson’s work. It showcases twenty years of images,
ranging from his days as a graduate student to the present. (Samplings
of Crewdson’s early work can be seen in his MFA portfolio
housed at Yale University’s Arts of the Book collection.)
Gregory Crewdson 1985-2005, features selections from
his six major bodies of work: “Early Work,” “Natural
Wonder,” Hover” “Twilight,” “Dream
House,” and “Beneath the Roses,” as well as
behind the scenes production stills.
Regarding Crewdson’s latest
series, ‘Beneath the Roses,’ Katy Siegel says, "[F]or
the first time he expands his vision from the individual, private
home to the public, shared spaces of commerce and sociality. In
his effort to realize a subjective vision, Crewdson, amazingly,
has grasped a social reality, just as the Hollywood films he has
taken as his model embody enough reality to speak meaningfully
to their audiences.” If you were to own any book by Crewdson,
whether a longtime admirer or new to his work, this would be the
one. - LARISSA LECLAIR Read Publisher's Description.
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