An immersive and staggeringly charming retrospective of the photographer’s work showcases his easeful acceptance of the world.
Big Timber, Montana. All Photos © Stephen Shore Stephen Shore fondly recalls his Polaroid SX-70. Shore, known for color images of everyday America, in books like Uncommon Places and American Surfaces, loved the immediacy of the SX-70. “Whatever you observed and chose to picture was right there,” he says of that ingenious little device.
Dans les années 70, Stephen Shore sillonne les États-Unis, révélant méticuleusement la banalité d'une Amérique complexe.
Сегодня в рубрике фотографы я покажу вам полтора десятка избранных, наиболее выразительных (на мой, конечно, взгляд) фотографий значимого цветного фотогафа Стефена Шора. Стефен Шор родился в Америке и как будто заранее решил составить биографию успешного фотографа: в шестилетнем возрасте получил в…
Сегодня в рубрике фотографы я покажу вам полтора десятка избранных, наиболее выразительных (на мой, конечно, взгляд) фотографий значимого цветного фотогафа Стефена Шора. Стефен Шор родился в Америке и как будто заранее решил составить биографию успешного фотографа: в шестилетнем возрасте получил в…
Image 17 of 25 from gallery of Paprocany Lake Shore Redevelopment / RS + Robert Skitek. Photograph by Tomasz Zakrzewski
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Well known for his neutral, objective and almost indifferent images, Stephen Shore (b. 1947) broke the mould when he made his photographic debut in the 1960s.
Images from Stephen Shore's career
Over at World-Architects I did a write-up of Image Building , an exhibition that opened last weekend at the Parrish Art Museum. Some of my ...
Shore asked 14 artists, curators and visionaries to select their favourite photographs from his Uncommon Places series
His pictures are both antidote and antecedent to our compulsive, social-media photography.
An immersive and staggeringly charming retrospective of the photographer’s work showcases his easeful acceptance of the world.
His pictures are both antidote and antecedent to our compulsive, social-media photography.
Joan Eardley’s career lasted barely fifteen years: she died in 1963, aged just forty-two. During that time she concentrated on two very different themes: the extraordinarily candid paintings of chi…
A vibrant new show at the Cincinnati Art Museum celebrates William Eggleston, Joel Meyerowitz, and other pioneers of color photography. VIEW OUR GALLERY.
Stephen Shore’s latest book gives new insight into one of his iconic masterpieces.
Découvrez le travail de Stephen Shore, un des premiers maîtres de la couleur, qui a photographié l’Amérique...
After our appointment with David's doctor in LA, we headed to Long Beach and enjoyed dinner with my sister's on 2nd street. It's right near the water, with tons of fun shops and restaurants.
Beach Street—the name of this little strip of a road in Tribeca conjures up images of a sandy shoreline and gentle waves. And while the Manhattan shore did used to lap at Greenwich Street, which Be…
His pictures are both antidote and antecedent to our compulsive, social-media photography.
Stephen Shore's photographs are attentive to ordinary scenes of daily experience, yet through color – and composition – Shore transforms the mundane into subjects of thoughtful meditation. A restaurant meal on a road trip, a billboard off a highway, and a dusty side street in a Texas town are all seemingly banal images, but upon reflection subtly imply meaning. Color photography attracted Shore for its ability to record the range and intensity of hues seen in life. In 1971, at age twenty-three, he became the first living photographer to have a one-person show at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. His 1982 book, Uncommon Places became a bible for young photographers seeking to work in color, because, along with that of William Eggleston, his work exemplified the fact that the medium could be considered art. Stephen Shore was born in New York in 1947. His work has been exhibited and collected at such venues as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Library of Congress, Washington DC, The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, International Center of Photography, New York, Getty Museum, Los Angeles, CA, Foundation Cartier, Jouy-en-Josas, France, Renwick Gallery, and the National Collection of Fine Arts, Washington, DC. Awards have included Royal Photographic Society, Honorary Fellow, German Photographic Society, Culture Prize, Aperture Foundation Award, National Endowment for the Arts, Guggenheim Foundation. He currently lives and works in New York.
With a large-format camera or his handy 35mm Leica, US photographer Stephen Shore became a quintessential chronicler of ordinary life in the 70s
Completed in 2014 in Tychy, Poland. Images by Tomasz Zakrzewski . Paprocany lake is the place where inhabitants of Tychy often spend their spare-time/(free time). In the neighborhood of the promenade there is...
The Stephen Shore exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art casts a wide net, including the anomalous periods when Shore worked abroad, but its main focus is his many photographs of hyper-quotidian America, our stalest shades of red, white, and blue. These quiet and straightforward pictures—of food, buildings, cars, and toilets—show that Shore is best understood as a photographer uninterested in photographing what is agreed to be worthy of capture.