Publisher's Description
Writing about The Museum of Modern Art, New York's monumental and
critically acclaimed 2005 Lee Friedlander retrospective, Richard Lacayo of
Time magazine said:“If a sophisticated notion of what a picture can look
like, the continuous construction of new avenues of feeling, and sheer, sustained
inventiveness are the measures we go by, then Friedlander is one of
the most important American artists of any kind since World War II. . .
Friedlander loves the muchness of the world. He loves the haphazard multitude
of things that can pop up in every picture—street signs, sunbeams,
bits of roofline, a jagged shadow—all colliding and contradicting one
another. In his breezy but very acute introduction to the show’s catalogue,
Peter Galassi, MoMA’s Chief Curator of photography, gets it just right when
he says some of Friedlander’s pictures give you the impression that ‘the
physical world had been broken into fragments and reconstituted under
pressure at three times its original density.’”
Now available for the first time—the paperback edition of this definitive,
comprehensive volume is being published to coincide with the traveling
retrospective’s stop in San Francisco at SFMOMA. At 480 pages, Friedlander
includes more than 750 photographs—770 duotone and 33 color—grouped
by series, as well as the incisive, aforementioned essay by Peter Galassi and
an afterword by Richard Benson.
Book Information
ISBN:
0870703447
Publisher:
The Museum of Modern Art, New York
Format:
Paperback, 480 pages
Language:
English
Dimensions:
11٫6 x
12٫4 x
1٫5 inches