Archive for July, 2014

On How @Edward__Abbey Is A Disgrace To Edward Abbey’s Memory

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , on July 6, 2014 by johnbuckley100

It was through a retweet by Anton Newcombe that I discovered the Twitter feed of @Edward__Abbey, purporting to convey, if not actual quotes of the late environmentalist radical, then his sensibility a quarter century after his death.  There are many such posthumous tweeters, from Richard Nixon to Oscar Wilde, and several are quite amusing.  The Abbey feed, however, is a travesty.

Edward Abbey was many things — an entertaining novelist, a crackling wit, the desert Southwest’s poet laureate, a fiercely radical opponent of unchecked growth and sprawl that led to environmental desecrations such as the Glen Canyon Dam.  He was wrong and illiberal on many things, particularly in what today we would recognize as a racist opposition to immigrants from Mexico, which he couched in terms of trying to protect the Southwest from a population explosion, but which was ugly any way you slice it.  But he was funny.  And persuasive in his humor.  What he wasn’t was a one-dimensional, self-parodic purveyor of the communist dialectic.  You wouldn’t know that from this disgraceful feed.

We don’t know if many of the purported quotes in the feed are actually from Abbey.  We’ve given Abbey close study over many years, and the quotes in the feed just don’t quite sound like him.  They are close, but no cigar.  They read like the product of a humorless teenager who knows enough about Abbey to echo some of what he wrote or said, but not enough to be able to convey the nuances. There is a notable absence of Abbey’s humor, which aside from his passion, was his most attractive quality.  Whomever is behind the feed makes Abbey sound like the biggest bore on the campus quad, not the writer of Desert Solitaire or The Monkey Wrench Gang.

As is its practice, after following Abbey, this morning I received an email from Twitter with “Suggestions based on Edward Abbey.”  The first suggestion was @Che__Guevara.  Of course it was.  What a reprehensible hijacking of one of America’s great treasures.

At A 4th Of July Parade: America In Seven Pictures

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , on July 5, 2014 by johnbuckley100

The MacArthur Boulevard Parade in NW Washington, D.C. would certainly not — to much of Red State America — represent the nation as a whole.  To us, it was a remarkably apt depiction of America circa 2014 in all of its glory, from the tackiness of the purple dog to the self-parody of the plutocrats, but particularly the joy of the Bolivian immigrants celebrating their new home.  Here are seven pictures that sum it up.

4th 2014b 4th 2014c 4th 2014d 4th 2014e 4th 2014f 4th 2014g 4th 2014h

The 4th Of July

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , on July 4, 2014 by johnbuckley100

Leica M8, 50mm Summilux, July 4th, 2009, Jackson, WY.

And On The 4th

Saul Leiter: Early Black and White Is Out, And Adds To Our Appreciation Of His Genius

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , on July 3, 2014 by johnbuckley100

Saul Leiter: Early Color

When Saul Leiter died over the Thanksgiving weekend in 2013, he finally got the full appreciation for his artistry that he had always deserved: a big New York Times obit, a loving remembrance in The New Yorker, an outpouring.  He was honored in death beyond the recognition he had received in life.

It’s tempting to think of him as a version of Vivian Maier who at least lived to be discovered in his lifetime.  But Leiter was not an unknown; he was an acknowledged member of The New York School of photographers, which included Bruce Davidson, William Klein, Diane Arbus, and Helen Levitt.  Some two dozen of his photographs were included, as early as 1953, in a MoMA exhibition curated by Edward Steichen.  He had friendships with artists such as Richard Pousette-Dart, Merce Cunningham, and W. Eugene Smith, for years shared his life with the artist Soames Bantry, and worked as a fashion photographer.  He was not an isolated nanny whose images were discovered only after his death.

But where Leiter’s story competes with his art for its sheer romantic power lies in the notion that he was not fully appreciated as one of the 20th Century’s masters of photography — not recognized as one of the greatest artists in the history of the medium — until relatively late in his career, when more than 40 years after many of his early pictures were taken, he shared with Margit Erb, who worked for his longtime gallerist Howard Greenberg, prints of his early color photographs, and was discovered anew.  It was Howard Greenberg who fought for the recognition of his artist, even though it appears that he had, until the mid-Nineties, an incomplete sense of Leiter’s talents.

The 1996 exhibition entitled “Saul Leiter: In Color,” and the subsequent book entitled Saul Leiter: Early Color, can fairly be described as revelations, as exciting as the discovery of a Mayan city, an unknown manuscript by Joyce, the lost print of a film by Von Stroheim.  What the world discovered was that, long before William Eggleston or Stephen Shore brought respectability to color photography, Leiter was producing work that bridged some magical cusp between painting and photography, his images taken looking out into the streets from inside the damp windows of New York City restaurants as striking as anything framed by urban Impressionists seventy years previously.  His framing of subjects — in some cases half of the image given away to a window shade, leaving only a sliver of life to be depicted in an otherwise completely dark rectangle; his eery and precise geometry; his peering through windows of taxis and coffee shops; his use of reflections to shatter an image into multiple parts — was even more powerful than that of HCB, who had a Surrealist’s eye and an architect’s sense of balance.

And now, eight months after his death comes Saul Leiter: Early Black and White, a two-volume companion from Steidl, with a strong assist from Howard Greenberg, and we can now see many of the antecedents and parallel discoveries of Leiter as a black and white photographer.  The volumes are divided, intelligently, between Interior and Exterior images, though Interior can also reflect portraits taken outdoors.  There is no gainsaying that it is Leiter’s color photography that stirs the heart and guarantees his stature.  But the black and white photographs, in many cases, show the same sense of geometric division of a particular scene that his color photographs depict, and which only a painter, or a genius — both of which describe Leiter — could have rendered.

Saul Leiter: Early Black and White is the most important photography book published this year, with the possible exception of the monograph accompanying the great Gary Winogrand shows in San Francisco and Washington.  It is best to start with the color photographs and work backward to these monochrome images.  Any photographer who wants to get a sense of how a painter would frame and envision a scene should immerse herself in Leiter’s work.  And anyone who appreciates powerfully disruptive art should check out Leiter’s work.  Less than a year after his death, with new books about him and his life celebrated in a documentary film, Leiter is finally getting his due.  He received real appreciation in his lifetime, but it was incommensurate with his value, his importance, his unquestionable genius.

http://www.steidl.de/flycms/en/Books/Early-Black-and-White/0223414951.html

 

The Summer’s White Hydrangea Frenzy

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , on July 2, 2014 by johnbuckley100

Leica Monochrom, 50mm Noctilux, f/0.95.

Hydrangea Frenzy 2014b