MEMORIES
of MYSELF
Danny Lyon
Hardbound,
11½ " x 10", 208
pages
39 color and 95 black& white illustrations
2009, Phaidon
Essays by Danny Lyon
From the Publisher:
Danny Lyon emerged as a courageous participant
and recorder of the civil rights movement in America in the early
1960s. He has long been considered one of the most popular and
influential American photographers and pioneered the style of
photographic 'New Journalism' - immersing himself and becoming
a participant in his subjects' lives and leading the way in a
style of photography that has influenced a following generation
of photographers such as Nan Goldin. He has received much recognition
for his work including two Guggenheim Fellowships, a Rockefeller
Fellowship, and ten National Endowment for the Arts awards. His
work is in a number of major photography collections and he has
had solo exhibitions at many museums including the Museum of Modern
Art, the Art Institute of Chicago. He recently was the subject
of a retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 2007.
His best-known bodies of work, mostly in black and white, include
'The Bikeriders', a documentation of a Chicago outlaw motorcyle
club that he photographed after joining them on the road, and
'Conversations with the Dead', a portrayal of life in the Texas
prison system. Both projects were published as photobooks and
are among the most sought-after photobooks for collectors and
photo-enthusiasts. A first edition of 'The Bikeriders' can now
be found on auction sites for over $2000 and both books are among
Parr and Badger's selection of the most important photobooks in
history in Phaidon's 'The Photobook: A History, Volume I'. This
book presents a collection of Lyon's photo essays, published in
their complete form for the first time, accompanied by texts written
by Lyon in his own distinctive voice.These short bodies of work
range from his early colour work made in Colombia in 1966 to his
recent work made in Cuba. Sexy, edgy, visceral, and rough, most
of this work has never been seen before and this book also includes
lesser-known examples of Lyon's work in colour. Each of the nine
photo essays includes 15 to 20 photographs, and the topics include
his 1966 series on the women living in a brothel in a Colombian
barrio, a beautiful 1965 series on a gang of young boys from Chicago,
a mesmerising and joyful black and white series on Haiti from
1983, a humorous project on derby cars and their contestants from
the late 1980s, a series on the troubled youth living in the Bushwick
neighbourhood of Brooklyn in the 1990s, and a stunning colour
series from Cuba in 2002.An introduction by Lyon gives an insight
into his motivations and his career and an interview with the
highly influential photography curator, Hugh Edwards, completes
the portrait of this rebellious and important figure of American
photography.
|