Color Photographs since 1970 by Joel Sternfeld on view at Foam in Amsterdam

16 December '11 by the editors | Source: www.artdaily.org

In mid-December Foam presents the first major retrospective exhibition in the Netherlands of the work of Joel Sternfeld (1944, New York), one of the pioneers of color photography.

Foam will be showing more than one hundred photos from ten different series in an exhibition spanning two floors. A highlight is Sternfeld's early work from the 1970s, which has never been previously exhibited. A large selection from famed series such as American Prospects, the result of his legendary journey through the United States, and Stranger Passing will also be on show. A constant factor in his work is his native land America, its inhabitants and the traces left by people on the landscape. With a subtle feeling for irony and an exceptional feeling for color, Sternfeld offers us an image of daily life in America over the last three decades.

New Color Photography Along with William Eggleston and Stephen Shore, Sternfeld saw to it that colour photography became a respected artistic medium in the 1970s. Until that time, colour was used widely in advertising and amateur photography, but was rarely seen in museums and galleries. Sternfeld was influenced by the color theory of the Bauhaus and by the work of William Eggleston, whose exhibition in MoMA in 1976 marked the official acceptance of colour photography in the art world.

Early Work
A typical 'street photographer' style can be recognized in Sternfeld's early and as yet unknown work, using a 35mm camera, to record everyday life in America. This work already contained the characteristics that made his later work so successful. In 1978, Joel Sternfeld began a long journey through the United States. For eight years he crisscrossed his homeland and recorded everything he encountered with his large-format camera. His investigation into the landscape and people moving within it resulted in the American Prospects series (1979-1983). In Stranger Passing (1987-2000) Sternfeld concentrated on people. He photographed them in an unambiguous way: from the same distance and looking directly into the camera. This series is a portrait of a society, comparable to the magnum opus of August Sander in the early twentieth century. Just as in American Prospect, there is evidence of a light absurdism as well as sympathy for those being portrayed.

The American Landscape
For the On This Site series (1993-1996), Sternfeld photographed urban and rural locations which were at first glance unremarkable. In the accompanying text, however, it becomes clear that these were the locations of 'crime passionnels', racial violence and stabbings. The photos thus acquire an entirely different connotation. In Sweet Earth (1993-2005) Sternfeld shows alternative lifestyles and communities which have arisen in America over the past two centuries. He travelled to the homes and communities of people that do not fit into conventional lifestyles and instead pursue another way of life. In Oxbow Archive (2005-2007) Sternfeld depicts the effects of the changing seasons on the landscape and how human behaviour influences nature. Slide Show

With the projects Treading on Kings (2001), on the G8 conference in Genoa, and When It Changed (2005), on the climate conference in Montreal, Sternfeld's work is becoming more political and strident. These projects will be shown in slide shows.

Picture: Joel Sternfeld, Summer Interns Having Lunch, Wall street, New York, 1987 + Joel Sternfeld and Luhring Augustine, New York.


Read entire article...


More news

The Museo del Prado is presenting to the public for the first time The Wine of Saint Martin’s Day by Pieter Bruegel the Elder, the leading figure within 16th-century Flemish painting.
14 December '11
www.artdaily.org


A painting believed to be by the street artist Banksy has appeared in Liverpool city centre.
14 December '11
www.bbc.co.uk


The extraordinary beauty, rarity and provenance of the pearl known as “La Peregrina” inspired a fierce bidding battle at Christie’s New York at the opening auction of The Collection of Elizabeth Taylor.
14 December '11
www.artdaily.org


The most expensive Chinese work of art at auction is still not paid for, more than a year after it was bid to 51.6 million pounds ($83 million).
13 December '11
www.bloomberg.com


Monet's Waterloo Bridge, created during one of his stays at The Savoy, is returning to the London hotel over 100 years after it was drawn.
13 December '11
www.bbc.co.uk


Major auction houses and galleries have been caught up in Beltracchi’s fake art scam
12 December '11
www.theartnewspaper.com


In an effort to grow its business, a Melbourne hotel is displaying an original work by street artist Banksy - and inviting people to walk off with it. For the next month, starting on December 15, any guest who successfully manages to steal “No Ball Games” - a painting valued at up to $15,000 - will be allowed to keep it.
12 December '11
www.theaustralian.com.au


Celebrated German artist reflects on his work before opening of his biggest UK show, at White Cube gallery in London.
12 December '11
www.guardian.co.uk


A rediscovered painting by Velazquez sold for 3 million pounds ($4.7 million) at an auction in London today as wealthy international collectors battled for trophy Old Master paintings.
11 December '11
www.bloomberg.com


British artist Damien Hirst will fill 11 Gagosian galleries worldwide with shows of his 'Spot' paintings, many for sale. But how much is too much?
11 December '11
www.latimes.com


An outstanding, unfinished Édouard Manet portrait of a woman sitting sedately on a balcony has had a temporary export bar placed on it by the government in the hope that someone will raise £28m to keep the painting in the UK.
09 December '11
www.guardian.co.uk


Participatory art, as it turns out, is not all fun and games. The New Museum, whose exhibition of the work of the Belgian-born artist Carsten Höller has been packing in crowds since it opened last month, has raised its general admission price to $16, from $12.
09 December '11
artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com


Booming art prices have produced plenty of "treasures in the attic" of late, and this week could see another when a painting first valued at 300 pounds ($470) is set to fetch up to three million after Bonhams discovered it was by Velazquez.
07 December '11
www.reuters.com


A painting attributed to one of Rembrandt's students has now been identified as one done by the master's hand. An advanced x-ray technology has revealed outlines of a self-portrait by a young Rembrandt underneath an oil painting of an old bearded man.
07 December '11
www.artfixdaily.com


Art experts have signed a petition to stop drilling into a fresco in Florence's Palazzo Vecchio which may be hiding a Leonardo Da Vinci work.
07 December '11
www.bbc.co.uk


Although Leonardo da Vinci died almost half a millennium ago, he has had a great year. The success of his show at the National Gallery in London has been sensational.
07 December '11
www.bloomberg.com


Being told that a work of art is fake alters your response to it, researchers at Oxford University have found.
07 December '11
www.telegraph.co.uk


Traders snared in a conmen's scam are pursued with demands to pay huge sums for an advertising listing.
05 December '11
www.guardian.co.uk


Featured dealer
Follow ArtListings
Search dealers
Fill in name


New on ArtListings
Art & Antiques Fairs
Museum exhibitions
Videos
Follow ArtListings