Richard Misrach (born 1949)
Untitled 1132-04 , 2004
chromogenic print
Collection of the Artist. Courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco; Pace/MacGill Gallery, New York and Marc Selwyn Fine Arts, Los Angeles
Luminous Photographs of the Ocean and Beach by Contemporary Photographer Richard Misrach at National Gallery of Art, Washington, May 25 – September 1, 2008 ]]>
Monumental color photographs explore the sublime beauty and inherent danger of the sea and its surroundings in the days following September 11, 2001 in the exhibition Richard Misrach: On the Beach, on view in the photography galleries at the National Gallery of Art from May 25 to September 1, 2008. Drawn from one of Misrach’s most recent series On the Beach, are 19 dramatic photographs—some as large as six feet high by ten feet wide. Major American photographer Misrach (b. 1949) is known for provocative work that addresses contemporary society’s troubled relationship to nature, especially in the American West.
While some of these photographs have been exhibited over the past few years, the national tour of the exhibition is the first time that so many works from this series can be seen together. The exhibition premiered at the Art Institute of Chicago last fall and will travel to the Henry Art Gallery at the University of Washington, Seattle (October 11, 2008, to January 18, 2009), and the High Museum of Art, Atlanta (May 23 to August 16, 2009).
“This exhibition celebrates the power of Richard Misrach’s landscapes. Having turned his camera from the desert to the beach, Misrach once again reveals his gift for expressing complex, important ideas in images of rare beauty,” said Earl A. Powell III, director, National Gallery of Art.
Exhibition Support and Organization and Curators
The exhibition is made possible through the generous support of the Trellis Fund.
Richard Misrach: On the Beach was initiated by the Art Institute of Chicago, where it was organized by Elizabeth Siegel, associate curator of photography. Sarah Greenough, senior curator of photographs, National Gallery of Art, coordinated the exhibition in Washington.
The Exhibition
The exhibition at the National Gallery of Art consists of 19 color photographs displayed in five photography galleries. Made between 2002 and 2005, the untitled chromogenic prints are vast in both scale and viewpoint. Despite the compelling beauty of the scene, a sense of disquietude is pervasive. Misrach began making vibrant color photographs of swimmers and sunbathers on the beach in Hawaii in the days immediately following the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001.
Employing a soaring vantage point, Misrach depicted the tiny swimmers and sunbathers, often alone or in pairs, engulfed by the dazzling immensity of the sea or an endless stretch of beach. He employed a floating viewpoint that eliminated all reference to the horizon or sky.
What quietly emerges from these lush, stunning images of people immersed in an idyllic environment is the subtle hint of potential danger. Listless sunbathers seem to be beached or partially buried in the sand. When photographed in groups, frolickers on the shore appear as if they were fleeing some unknown danger. By seeming to pit man against nature, these photographs underscore the delicacy and precariousness of man.
The intimation of danger in paradise is integral to the meaning of the photographs. The series—made over a five-year period—speaks to the sense of physical and psychological vulnerability that has pervaded American consciousness since 9/11. The sense of foreboding is also implicit in the title of the series, On the Beach,inspired by Nevil Shute’s 1957 novel of the same name in which the sole survivors of an atomic holocaust—stranded on an island in the Pacific—await the approaching nuclear clouds.
The Photographer
“I’ve come to believe that beauty can be a very powerful conveyor of difficult ideas,”
said American photographer Richard Misrach . Born in 1949 in Los Angeles, he was inspired by the political activism of his student days in Berkeley in the late 1960s and early 1970s, as well as by the work of landscape photographers of the West, especially Ansel Adams and Edward Weston. For the past 30 years, Misrach has created a complex body of work, including Desert Cantos, a series informed by the powerful mixture of his love of the Western landscape, and his passionate commitment to its preservation. His work also reveals his engagement with contemporary social, political, and cultural issues.
Of his On the Beach photographs, Misrach wrote: “I was drawn to the fragility and grace of the human figure in the landscape. My thinking about this work was influenced by the events of 9/11, particularly by the images of individuals and couples falling from the World Trade Towers, as well as by the 1950s Cold War novel and film On the Beach . Paradise has become an uneasy dwelling place; the sublime sea frames our vulnerability, the precious nature of life itself.”
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