Todd Levin, photographed by Tess Mayer inside his Usonian home designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, "The Stuart Richardson House" (1941) with Martín Ramírez, "Untitled (Horse and Rider)". All Artwork images © the Artist.
Curatorial Project 9 - "SOMETHING + NOTHING"
"SOMETHING + NOTHING”
A 40 year retrospective of photography by Stephen Shore
curated by Todd Levin
Sprüth Magers London
26 November 2013 - 11 January 2014
For more information, please go to:
https://spruethmagers.com/exhibitions/stephen-shore-something-nothing-london/
"SOMETHING + NOTHING” Sprüth Magers London front window street view...
"SOMETHING + NOTHING” gallery one installation image
"SOMETHING + NOTHING” gallery one installation image
"SOMETHING + NOTHING” gallery one installation image
Stephen SHORE - “Gallup, New Mexico” 1972; "Zhytomir, Ukraine” 2012; "Abu Dhabi" 2009; "Jerusalem, Israel” 2010; "West Avenue, Great Barrington, Massachusetts” 1974; "505 Sunset Terrace, Amarillo, Texas” 1974
Stephen SHORE - "Jerusalem, Israel” 2010; "Amarillo, Texas” 1972; "Sefad, Israel” 2010; "Jerusalem, Israel” 2010; "New York City, New York” 1972; "Sneden's Landing, New York” 1972; "Galina Karpenko, Tomashpol, Ukraine” 2012; "Palm Beach, Florida” 1973
Stephen SHORE - "Staten Island, New York” 1972; "Marshall, Texas” 1972; "The Home of Abram and Malka Dikhtayar, Bazalia, Ukraine” 2012; "Abu Dhabi” 2009; "The Home of Lyubov Brenman, Borispol, Ukraine” 2012; "Korsun, Ukraine” 2012; "Abu Dhabi" 2009
Stephen SHORE - "The Home of Isaak Bakmayev, Berdichev, Ukraine” 2012; "The Home of Tzylia Bederman, Bucha, Ukraine” 2012; "Jerusalem, Israel” 2009; "Granite, Oklahoma” 1972; "The Home of Lyubov Brenman, Borispol, Ukraine” 1972; "New York City, New York,” 1972
Stephen SHORE - "Jerusalem, Israel” 2009; "Clinton, Oklahoma” 1972; "New York City, New York” 1972; "Abu Dhabi" 2009; "The Home of Raisa Turovskaya, Ovruch, Ukraine” 2012; "New York City, New York” 1972
Stephen SHORE - "Tel Aviv, Israel” 2012; "Amarillo, Texas” 1974; "Zhytomir, Ukraine” 2012; "Hebron, West Bank” 2010
Stephen SHORE - "Amarillo, Texas” 1972; "Abu Dhabi" 2009; "Jerusalem, Israel” 2010; "Lubbock, Texas” 1972; "Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario” 1974; "Amarillo, Texas” 1973; "Zhytomir, Ukraine” 2012; "Jerusalem, Israel” 2009; "Abu Dhabi" 2009
Stephen SHORE - "Queens, New York” 1972; "Jerusalem, Israel” 2009; "Queens, New York” 1972; "Uman, Ukraine” 2012; "Tomashpol, Ukraine” 2012; "Jerusalem, Israel” 2010; "Abu Dhabi” 2009; "Jerusalem, Israel” 2009
René MAGRITTE "La Condition Humaine" 1935 oil on canvas 10-1/8 X 8-1/8 inches; Stephen SHORE "U.S. 97, South of Klamath Falls, Oregon, July 21, 1973" 1973 chromogenic color print 11-1/2 x 13-5/8 inches
"SOMETHING + NOTHING” gallery II installation image
"SOMETHING + NOTHING” gallery II installation image
Stephen SHORE - "Granite, Oklahoma” 1972; "U.S. 89, Arizona” 1972; "Presidio, Texas” 1975; "Borispol, Ukraine” 2012; "Eliat, Israel’ 2010; "Abu Dhabi” 2009
Stephen SHORE - "Village of Bitin, West Bank” 2010; "South of Zefat, Israel” 2010; "Dead Sea from Judean Desert, West Bank” 2009; "Tabor River Reserve, Northern Jordan Valley, Israel” 2010
John CAGE ‘Lecture on Nothing’ from “SILENCE: Lectures and Writings” by John Cage 1961 Wesleyan University Press, Middletown, CT., first edition/first printing; John CAGE ‘Lecture on Something’ from “It Is: A Magazine for Abstract Art” 1959 (Autumn, issue 4) editor Philip Pavia
Curatorial statement:
Taking its title from composer and philosopher John Cage’s 'Lecture on Something' and 'Lecture on Nothing,' a reference to the artist’s search for beauty in the everyday, the exhibition will celebrate a career that spans over four decades, bringing together 65 photographs, including vintage works from the artist’s seminal series "American Surfaces" (1972-3) and "Uncommon Places" (1973-79), displayed for the first time alongside works from the recent series "Abu Dhabi" (2009), "Israel" (2010) and the never before exhibited series "Ukraine" (2012).
Stephen Shore’s photographs of ordinary America have had an extraordinary impact on photography as an artistic practice. The artist sets the standard for colour photography of the social landscape in his best known bodies of work "American Surfaces" and "Uncommon Places," pioneering two of the most important photographic idioms of the past forty years; the diaristic snapshot and the monumentalised landscape. Shore’s art of pictorial composition and handling of colour, light and shadow also spurred interest in colour photography and for the first time gave it an unchallengeable status as a genuine artistic medium. In 1972 Shore embarked on his first road trip around America, focusing his camera on the immense diversity of the suburban landscape; anonymous intersections, residential architecture, uniform drive-by diners, generic motel rooms and monotonous gas stations. Embracing the work of
the Conceptual artists of the 1960s who adopted the photographic medium as a tool to make systematic, often compulsive explorations of locations, Shore too began to assemble a sequential visual record of his travels in which the singular photograph was only significant in terms of its place in the series. His images are now seen as classic Americana; culturally rich snapshots showing the tempo, palette and artifacts of the time and place. The artist’s recent works in both digital and film, illustrate a continued interest in documenting the social landscape. In images captured during his visits to Israel, Abu Dhabi and Ukraine in the last four years, Shore's photographic eye similarly directs us to markers of time and of change, capturing the quotidian, a sense of locality and signs of cultural and temporal drift.
The exhibition at Sprüth Magers London approaches Shore’s oeuvre taxonomically; the images organized categorically rather than chronologically, by subject matter rather than series. Works from the artist’s early and recent series are removed from their original groupings and arranged side by side in an exhibition context for the first time, identifying an ordered criteria and an aesthetic approach which has remained largely unchanged over time and location. Seeking to show objects in their ordinariness, Shore does not so much narrate in the image as provide the evidence for the audience to construct their own narrative
- Todd Levin 2013
Press
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