PHOTOGRAPHY
AFTER FRANK
Philip Gefter
Hardbound,
6" x 8½",
224
pages
30 color and 45 black & white illustrations
2009, Aperture
Essays by Philip Gefter
From the Publisher:
In Photography After Frank, former New York Times writer
and picture editor Philip Gefter narrates the tale of contemporary
photography, beginning at the pivotal moment when Robert Frank
commenced his seminal works of the 1950s. Along the way, he connects
the dots of photography's evolution into what it is today, forging
links between its episodes to reveal unsuspected leaps. Gefter
takes Frank's The
Americans as a decisive challenge to photographic objectivity,
with its grainy, off-hand-seeming spontaneity and its documentation
of life beyond the picket fence. Thus viewed, The Americans provides
Gefter with a bridge to the phenomenon of the staged document'
and Postmodernism's further challenge to image fidelity. Other
areas of discussion include photojournalism, the recent diversity
of portraiture styles, the influence of private and corporate
collections on curatorial decisions and how the market shapes
art making. Throughout Photography After Frank, Gefter
deftly demonstrates Frank's legacy in the work of dozens of important
individual artists who followed in his wake, from Lee Friedlander
and Nan Goldin to Stephen Shore and Ryan McGinley. The book includes
texts written exclusively for this publication as well as essays
drawn from Gefter's critical writings, reviews and even obituaries.
Photography After Frank offers a page-turning approach
to a subject that will appeal to students and art world aficionados
alike.
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