FREDERICK
LAW OLMSTED LANDSCAPES
Lee Friedlander
Hardbound,
13 x 12¾", 84
pages
89 tritone illustrations
2008, D.A.P.
Text by Lee Friendlander
From the Publisher:
A natural chronicler of all things uniquely
American, photographer Lee Friedlander here puts his lens to the
work of Frederick Law Olmsted (1822–1903), designer of many
of this country’s most iconic public landscapes and the
father of North American landscape architecture. Olmsted was responsible
for a staggering number of America’s greatest parks, including
the Niagara reservation (North America’s oldest state park),Washington
Park, the Biltmore Estate, the U.S. Capitol building landscape
and entire parkway systems in Buffalo and Louisville. His most
famous work remains New York City’s Central Park, a pioneering
egalitarian gesture that, at the time, was very unusual for its
ready accessibility. This book, published to coincide with The
Metropolitan Museum of Art’s 2008 exhibition, compiles 89
photographs made by Friedlander in Olmsted’s public parks
and private estates.
This stunning collection of rich tritones celebrates
the complex, idiosyncratic picture-making of one of the country’s
greatest living photographers, and also arrives upon the 150 year
anniversary of Olmsted’s 1858 design for Central Park. Rambling
across bridges and through open meadows and dense undergrowth,
Friedlander locates a pure pleasure in Olmsted’s designs—in
the meticulous stonework, the balance of exposure to shade and
in the mature, weather-beaten trees that attest to the durability
of Olmsted’s vision. |