When Richard Misrach arrived from Southern California onto the UC
Berkeley campus, as an undergraduate mathematics student, he found himself in
the tumultuous atmosphere of 1967 Berkeley amidst anti-war protests, class shut
downs and teach-ins. He also discovered the ASUC Art Studio.
“…I went there to learn how to
throw pots, but I quickly became interested in photography,” Misrach says. “At
the same time, things were heating up on campus with the People's Park riots
and tear gassings. I picked up the camera to photograph the world
exploding around me.”
This foray into photography would not only have a
profound effect on his life but also establish a powerful, socially conscious
character to Misrach’s photography and a subsequent, concurrent theme—the contemplation of people, industry and society’s influences
upon the landscape and the negative impact on the environment that ensues.
“Night
Fishing, Near Bonnet CarrĂ© Spillway, Louisiana,” (1998), by Richard Misrach.
Photo courtesy of the Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco.
|
“I wasn't a particularly politically engaged
person before entering Berkeley, but it was impossible not to have one's value
systems challenged during this period,” he says. “My initial interest in
photography was the great f64 landscape tradition of the West Coast (Ansel
Adams, Edward Weston, Wynn Bullock, etc.), but soon my interest in the
aesthetics of photography melded with my political awakening and I began
looking at the work of people like Dorothea Lange and Bruce Davidson. My
work has been trying to reconcile the two poles ever since.”
An internationally acclaimed landscape artist,
Misrach’s spends much of his time working in solitude in the deserts of the
Southwest for his ongoing series, “Desert Cantos,” initially with an 8”X10”
Deardorff camera and now with a medium format, digital Hasselblad and his
iPhone.
“Self-Portrait at Night, White Sands, New Mexico,” (1976/2014), by Richard Misrach. Photo courtesy of the Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco. |
“It's so hard to explain, but photography and
working in the landscape (primarily the desert, but also in Hawaii and Louisiana)
is hugely rewarding. For over forty years, it has proven intellectually and
emotionally engaging and challenging. And physically, I love being in the
desert. I find the heat sensual and have a self-awareness of myself on the
planet in a way I don't feel anywhere else,” he says. “The silence is
magnificent. Moreover, I've always thought of the desert landscape as a place
where culture-civilization stands out in relief. I think my ongoing “Desert
Cantos” project (1979-present) has been driven by this idea. Whether it's
military testing, environmental degradation or government policy, the desert is
one of the places where civilization and nature collide.”
While his new exhibition, “Richard Misrach: Being(s)
1975-2015,” at the Fraenkel Gallery focuses upon landscapes, each of the
approximately 20 works feature human figures.
“Untitled (9485 #FC),” (2008), by Richard Misrach. Photo courtesy of the Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco. |
“If you asked most people, who
are involved in any way, they would say that Richard Misrach is a landscape photographer,”
says Frish Brandt, executive director of the Fraenkel Gallery, “but this show
points out that his landscape photography has always been about how we live in
the land and the human element in the land, so whether there’s people or not,
there’s always been the essence of humankind.”
“Untitled (November 10, 2012, 3:08 p.m.),” (2012), by Richard Misrach.
Photo courtesy of the Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco.
Info:
|
“Richard Misrach: Being(s) 1975-2015” through May 30. (Book signing with Misrach for his book “The Mysterious Opacity of Other Beings”: 2 p.m. May 9.) 10:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Tuesday-Friday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday. Fraenkel Gallery, 49 Geary St., S.F. (415) 981-2661. www.fraenkelgallery.com
No comments:
Post a Comment