William Eggleston: American Photographer
Edward Cella Art & Architecture announces an exhibition of photographs by noted photographer William Eggleston. Entitled William Eggleston: American Photographer, the exhibition presents a rich offering of unique and historic prints dating from 1965 through 1985 including several of Eggleston’s most iconic images. Designed to present insights into the photographer’s working methods and philosophy, the exhibition is especially timely as it runs concurrently with William Eggleston: Democratic Camera Photographs and Video, 1961-2008 presented by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and with William Eggleston: On the Road presented by dnj Gallery.
Edward Cella Art & Architecture announces an exhibition of photographs by noted photographer William Eggleston. Entitled William Eggleston: American Photographer, the exhibition presents a rich offering of unique and historic prints dating from 1965 through 1985 including several of Eggleston’s most iconic images. Designed to present insights into the photographer’s working methods and philosophy, the exhibition is especially timely as it runs concurrently with William Eggleston: Democratic Camera Photographs and Video, 1961-2008 presented by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and with William Eggleston: On the Road presented by dnj Gallery.
Eggleston is widely recognized as one of the most important photographers of the 20th century owing to his innovative and unconventional approach to composition and early adoption and mastery of color photography. Over a more than thirty-year career, the artist’s selection of seemingly commonplace subject matter lays bare the fleeting qualities of human existence while offering a tender compendium of his home, the American South. Eggleston offers epiphany-like insight into the everyday. The interplay of opulent color and nonchalant forms in Eggleston's photographs honors his subjects while providing an additional layer of meaning, turning them into stunning visual metaphors of an alienated world.
With an eye not to glorify the world in front of his lens, but with the intent to show things for what they really look like, Eggleston states, “I think I had often wondered what other things see -- if they saw like we see. And I’ve tried to make a lot of different photographs as if a human did not take them.” Refining this idea, exhibition curator, Carole Thompson, notes, “Eggleston’s color images flaunt their apparent formlessness. Although the artist acknowledges a debt to Henri Cartier- Bresson, his photographs reject Bresson’s decisive moments.”
Representing a collaboration between Carole Thompson Fine Art and Edward Cella Art & Architecture, the exhibition of more than forty vintage photographs begins with several one-of-a- kind black-and-white, hand-developed photographs of the 1960s and also includes pristine examples of the vivid dye transfer work of the early 1970s. To Eggleston, the richness of photography stems from the unexpected and uncontrollable, and the exhibition’s inclusion of the artist’s first experiments in color photography, unique Chromogenic-coupler prints developed in the late 1960s and early 1970s, document his breakthrough with impromptu encounters with various individuals and scenes. Comprehensive in nature yet approachable in scale, the exhibition features selected prints from six of the artist’s influential series, including the landmark 1976 catalogue, William Eggleston’s Guide, Los Alamos project, and, for the first time in Los Angeles, offers examples from the artist’s Berlin Series. His oeuvre has profoundly influenced generations of photographers, as well as critics, curators, writers, cinematographers and filmmakers.
EXHIBITION PROGRAM
William Eggleston: Seen and Unseen by Carole Thompson
Saturday, November 6, 2010 / 4:00 PM
Join independent curator and photographic historian, Carole Thompson for an overview of William Eggleston: American Photographer as she presents her personal and unique insights into the work and life of photographer William Eggleston.
Carole Thompson is a private art dealer with a specialty in American Photographers and Painters of the 20th Century. A former curator at the Detroit Institute of Arts and the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Thompson published the first catalogue raisonné of Eggleston's multiples. Her clients include the J. Paul Getty Museum, LACMA, SFMoMA, and the Santa Barbara Museum of Art among others. She is instrumental in creating important private collections as an advisor to private museums and individuals internationally.
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Self-Portrait in a Photo Booth), Circa 1974
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Shoney's Waitress), 1968
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Man in Car), 1968
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Blasted Tree) Morton, Mississippi, from the William Eggleston's Guide Series., 1972
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Girl in Green Dress Walking) Near Minter City & Glendora, Mississippi, from the William Eggleston's Guide Series., 1973
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Burning Brazier) Memphis, 1975 (Printed 1981)
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William Eggleston, Untitled (The Red Room) Tallahatchie Country, Mississippi, from the William Eggleston's Guide Series., 1972
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Orange & White Ford Truck), 1972 (Printed 1974)
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Blue Truck with Wisteria) Memphis, 1972
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Red Rusted Upside-down Sedan), 1972
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Man Reaching for Vending Machine Candy), 1972
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Here is the Killer), 1970 or 1972
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Pontiac Logo on Square Sign), 1972
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Martin Luther King, JFK & RFK decanters in Bar), 1972 (Printed 1972)
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Grave Marker in Form of a Dried, Brown Cross), 1972
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William Eggleston, Untitled (School Girl With Pigtails School Zone Sign), Memphis, 1970 (Printed 1970)
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Viewers Aimed for Tourists), 1967
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William Eggleston, Untitled (TV with "Got To Get RCA" Letters on Screen), 1967
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Gully from Above with Pines), 1967
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Grandma with Dresser), 1967
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Santa Claus Print Covering Door), 1970
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Jasper Staples, Family Chauffer and Handyman), 1970
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Used Cars on Auto-shaped Neon Sign) from the Los Alamos Project, 1972
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Stop Sign in Middle of Road) from the Los Alamos Project, 1972 Printed 1974
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Fresh Up with 7-Up), from the Los Alamos Project, 1975
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Neon Confederate Flag) from the "Troubled Waters" portfolio., 1971-73 (Printed 1980)
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Twinkle Town Airport at Sunrise) from the "Southern Suite" portfolio., 1974 (Printed 1981)
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Greenwood Moose Lodge), from the "Southern Suite", 1972 (Printed appx. 1981)
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Budidng Tree Against Wall) from the Berlin Series, 1985
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Berlin Wall with Graffiti) from the Berlin Series, 1985
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Small Tree in Autumn) from the Berlin Series, 1985
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Torn Posters on Wall, Naples Italy), 1992
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Church Alter with Electric Light Bulb, Naples Italy), 1992
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Iceburg Cafe, Western USA), 1972 or 1973
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Minnows on Hwy 61 in the Mississippi Delta), 1972
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Yellow Garage with Limb on Roof Red 7-Up Sign), 1972
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Rooming House Western US), 1972
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Woman's Nude Silhouette on Red Door), 1972
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Window with Red Arrow and Partial Painted Landscape), 1972
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Red Car and Driver Neon Sign), 1972
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William Eggleston, Untitled (Western Bar with Old Well as TV Antenna), 1972