STARBURST
Color Photography in America 1970–1980
Hardbound,
9¾" x 11¾", 276
pages
315 color illustrations
2010, Hatje Cantz
Edited and text by Kevin Moore
Essays by James Crump, Leo Rubinfien
From the Publisher:
It is hard to credit today that the artistic
value of color photography was once deemed debatable and controversial,
even as recently as the 1980s. William Eggleston’s watershed
exhibition at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1976, generated
plenty of scorn and confusion, as spectators struggled to accept
his seemingly ordinary-looking color images of Southern life as
art. Early photographs by Stephen Shore, Helen Levitt, Joel Meyerowitz
and others received similarly hostile or ambivalent reviews. Color
photography also had opponents within photography,most notoriously
in Henri Cartier-Bresson. But as color processes both diversified
and grew more sophisticated, and further approaches to the medium
developed, the floodgates were opened wide. Starburst
examines the first great practitioners of artistic color photography
in the United States: Eggleston, Shore, Levitt, Meyerowitz, plus
Joel Sternfeld, William Christenberry, John Divola, Mitch Epstein,
Jan Groover, Robert Heinecken, Barbara Kasten, Les Krims, Richard
Misrach, John Pfahl, Leo Rubinfien, Neal Slavin, Eve Sonneman
and many more. Grounded in reviews of sources from the 1970s,
and with an abundance of images, this survey makes a thorough
assessment of this paradigm shift in the history of art photography.
Exhibition schedule: Cincinnati Art Museum, February
13–May 9, 2010 Princeton University Art Museum July 8–September
26, 2010 |