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Wednesday, November 13, 2024 |
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In the American West: Richard Avedon |
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Richard Avedon (1923-2004). Patricia Wilde, housekeeper, Kalispell, Montana, 6/12/81. ©1980, Estate of Richard Avedon, Courtesy Amon Carter Museum. P1985.28.63.
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TUCSON, AZ.- In 1985, the Amon Carter Museum in Fort Worth, Texas organized the exhibition In the American West: Photographs by Richard Avedon. The project opened to widespread acclaim and was, in fact, one of the most highly attended exhibitions in the museums history. A restaged version of this monumental exhibition just opened at the Center for Creative Photography on the University of Arizona campus, and remain on view until January 1, 2007.
Avedon traveled for five years, making portraits of ordinary people living and working in the Western United States. Assertive, controversial, and graphically striking, these portraits generated extensive (and at times, heated) discussion about the nature of portraiture, photography, and prevailing stereotypes of the region. Avedons oversized photographs of working class westerners have become icons in photographic history, as capable of generating debate today as when they were first exhibited.
The current exhibition presents a major portion of the works from the 1985 staging of In the American West. The works in it were selected by Avedon himself, together with Amon Carter Senior Curator of Photographs John Rohrbach, to mark its twentieth anniversary of the original exhibition. In 1989, the Center for Creative Photography worked with the photographer to establish the Richard Avedon Archive, which today retains the largest institutional holdings of his work spanning his career in photography. Avedon designated that the Center host the restaged version of In the American West before his death in 2004.
We are pleased to be able to present this monumental exhibition in Tucson, says Douglas R. Nickel, director of the Center. Richard Avedon had a special fondness for our institution, and was a regular visitor here. It is fitting that the last exhibition he helped organize should come back to the region and research center so closely associated with his distinguished career.
Background of the 1985 Exhibition: In the American West was the brainchild of the Amon Carter Museums first director, Mitchell A. Wilder. By the 1970s, Richard Avedon had become world famous for elevating fashion photography to an art form. But when Wilder saw Avedons July 4, 1978, portrait of a ranch foreman from Ennis, Mont., he was inspired to ask the artist to continue making photographs of that type under the sponsorship of the Amon Carter Museum. He gave Avedon license to photograph his view of the American West.
Avedon agreed to Wilders proposal. From 1979 to 1984, he traveled through 13 states and 189 towns from Texas to Idaho, conducting 752 sittings and exposing 17,000 sheets of film with his 8-by-10-inch Deardorff view camera.
Focusing on the rural West, Avedon visited ranches and rodeos, but he also went to truck stops, oil fields, and slaughterhouses. Rather than playing to the western tropes of grandeur and space, he sought out people whose appearance and life circumstances were the antithesis of mythical images of the ruggedly handsome cowboy, beautiful pioneer wife, or enterprising robber-baron. The subjects he chose for the portraits were modern, ordinary people, coping with their own personal cycles of boom and bust.
Instead of glamorizing these figures, Avedon brought their various human frailties to the forefront. All of them were pictured against a seamless white backdrop that removed any reference to place, and many of the portraits were dramatically oversize, shocking in their stark detail. Visitors to the exhibition in 1985 came face-to-face with images that shattered preconceptions of the region and its people.
Twenty Years Later: Although small groups of prints from In the American West have been periodically exhibited since 1985 (and included by Avedon in his retrospective exhibitions), a larger portion of the project has not been seen in the United States since its initial tour. Seventy-eight of the original 124 portraits will be on view in this exhibition, including all of the projects most important and best-known images.
Rohrbach began working with Avedon in early 2003 on image selection and installation design. Following Avedons death on October 1, 2004, Rohrbach has continued to work with The Richard Avedon Foundation to ensure that the photographers initial vision is preserved for a new generation of visitors.
The Tucson presentation is being coordinated by Britt Salvesen, curator of photography at the Center for Creative Photography. The New York publisher Harry N. Abrams Inc. has reissued the exhibition catalogue with a new introductory preface by Rohrbach. In the American West: Photographs by Richard Avedon was organized by the Amon Carter Museum, Fort Worth, Texas . Generous funding for the exhibition is provided by the Katrine M. Deakins and Crystelle Waggoner Charitable Trusts, Bank of America.
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