Lee Friedlander - MoMA
As new as I am to discussing cinema in a serious fashion (if I can even manage that), I have even more difficulty discussing photography. Simply put, I don’t know what makes a given photo a “masterpiece.” I can find hundreds of photos clever in composition and subject, but i don’t think i’ve ever seen a photograph that’s as inexhaustible as a painting (or a film, or a novel). There’s something static and fixed about photographic meaning (to me), some limits of art that photography cannot break through, no matter how abstract or conceptual. When looking at photographic images, I’m some sort of formalist at heart; narrative work doesn’t really excite me. The works of, say, a fabulist like Gregory Crewdson don’t create any “negative space” (in the Manny Farber use of the term) in my mind. They’re just cluttered and posed and I really don’t care about the world the photographer is trying to create (while the same tactics highly interest me in film.) I’m more interested in the way pictorial space in a photo is divided, whether it’s through framing or depth of field.
Lee Friedlander’s work looks accidental. The early work on display is full of shadows, reflections and other artifacts a “professional” photographer would avoid. We can tell by his early commercial work (mostly portraits of Jazz artists) that Friedlander is more than technically competent, so why the obstructed shots, why the occluding shadows?
I think it’s a sort of whimsical formalism, a way to divide space without heavy vertical and horizontal lines. A truck’s rearview mirror turns a flat, midwestern landscape into a strange, almost cubist triptych. The reverse side of a “Yield” sign is a Suprematist triangle dominating the landscape, with a long shadowy brother subverting the artiness. An old couple stands in front of an International style building, looking and pointing at Mount Rushmore, which we can see reflected in the large, square windows of the building behind them.
Most of Friedlander’s work was made with a 35mm Leica, until in the 80s[tk] he acquired a medium format Hassellblad with a wide-angle lens. The clarity and depth of his pictures immediately improved, but he continued to tackle some of the same subjects, almost to the point of duplicating subject matter he had photographed with a normal depth of focus in this new, wide-angle realm. It’s like the formalism of his early work suddenly sprang into 3D life.
Friedlander’s work was a welcome respite from the Big Germanism that dominates contemporary photography. His photos show that one can be clever, and conceptual without making a one’s cleverness the subject of the work.
“Friedlander” is at MoMA in New York until August 29.
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Should I buy the big Lee Friedlander book?
i don’t know; it’s a pretty hefty book. Actually, if you get the book, you don’t even have to go to the exhibition, really, because most of the prints (besides the ones taken with the hassellblad, are pretty close to the actual size of the prints on display. I bought the book because I’m a sucker and MoMA had 20% off for members the day I was there.
Something I was going to mention in this review but I forgot my notes at home was that in the catalog, they compare Friedlander’s compositions to these Matisse and Bonnard paintings that hang in MoMA (Goldfish and Palette, 1914 and The Breakfast Room, 1930-31, respectively.), which coincidentally are two of my most-loved paintings there, for precisely the same reasons I like Friendlander.
Very cool that you bring up Crewdson, because I have felt that this was a discussion brewing amongst film people that I haven’t been able to have yet - while I understand exactly what you’re saying here, I have always liked Crewdson’s work for exactly the same reason I like what I like in film - I guess I consider him more of a filmmaker… the experimental single-frame narrative kind.
Anyway thanks for reminding me…
Unfortunately, the most recent Crewdson exhibition at the Luhring Augustine gallery here in New York closed on Saturday before I had a chance to see it, and see if seeing the photos in all their ginormous glory would sway my opinion. I suspect not, but I would have liked to have checked it out.
I like Lee Friedlander a lot.
Friendlander’s work is awesome. He should be studied by “professional” photographers. Perhaps it will help to open their minds…
Yes, I do rather agree that Friendlander’s work is quite amazing. Jolly Jolly.