
I picked up the recent Cornelia Magazine at Rochester Contemporary. The yellow and black publication is a visual arts review for Western New York and Southern Ontario, and I turned to it hoping we hadn’t missed a great show during the four days we spent in Toronto. We did—Annie McDowell’s work at two seven two.
Issue #20 includes a fascinating article by Alexa Kanarowski about “New Topographics: Photographs of a Man-Altered Landscape,” the pivotal 1975 exhibition at the George Eastman House. It is the second most-cited photography exhibition in history, a turning point in photography, a radical shift away from traditional depictions of landscape. Yet, at the time, the show looked more ordinary than radical—ordinary, as in “Ansel Adams photographed landscapes, and you photographed this for the walls of the Eastman?”
The Eastman’s website entry on this show says: “The question persists as to why this unassuming exhibition came to be so widely known and understood as the seminal event in which photography’s landscape paradigm shifted away from the sublime, ushering in a new era of theoretical approaches. Of those who did see the exhibition, few seem to have thought themselves in the presence of a turning point; paradigm shifts are rarely recognized except in retrospect.”
William Jenkins studied at Visual Studies Workshop and was the Curator of Twentieth-Century Photography at the Eastman in 1975. He selected ten then-young American photographers—Robert Adams, Lewis Baltz, Bernd and Hilla Becher, Joe Deal, Frank Gohlke, Nicholas Nixon, John Schott, Stephen Shore, and Henry Wessel—for his show “New Topographics.” The Baltz photo above could be an Ed Ruscha painting. Photography in the seventies found a seat at the Modern Art table.
I was an art major at IU but only lasted a couple of years. When I moved back here I took a job as a graphic artist with the Rochester Police Department, a one-year position paid for by a grant, and one of the benefits was they would pay for a college class. So, in that one year I took Photo 1 and Photo 2 at the U of R. Bill Jenkins was my teacher. I remember him liking the Stones’ “Exile on Main Street.” He took us through the darkroom techniques directly into art. I eventually finished with a BA in Studio Arts from Empire State College, and those photo classes were the best classes I took.
In Cornelia, Alexa Kanarowski writes, “for all its economic fatigue, Western New York offers a fertile ground for reimagining approaches to topography and photography. Our stagnation is not purely decay but a pause, a long exposure in which the latent image continues to develop. A New New Topographics could foreground our entanglement with the climate, data, and capital systems we’ve built.”
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