The world is uncomposed. It is messy and chaotic. It's made of a bunch of things that have nothing to do one with the other. It makes no sense.
@cliveh I have to thank you for this one. I have the big Friedlander MoMA 2005 retrospective book. Bought it at MoMA in 2006 or 2007. Looked at it a lot back then, but it's been sitting, unopened, on my book shelves for at least 15 years. I going through it today with immense pleasure thanks to this thread.
I'm such a psycho that I have a second copy still sealed in the shrinkwrap![]()



Musing further on this theme, it seems to me that how we approach photography is mostly about how we approach the mixing of order and chaos.
Lee Friedlander seemed to gravitate to the chaotic, with little bits - very important bits - of order sprinkled in.
Henri Cartier-Bresson was great at finding the most amazing and structured order in a chaotic world.
And Crewdson and Jeff Wall? They structure an ordered world for the camera, and then add a "seasoned to taste" bit of chaos to it.
Some Jeff Wall as an example:
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Ignore what's actually there, and make everything artificially nervous and busy.
There are an awful lot of artsy-fartsy clones of his style these days.
Stems
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One of my favorite books. Simply love these. Among other things, I think he has actually invented a new visual syntax, but explaining that is above my pay grade. And I particularly love Western Landscapes, shot with a Hasselblad SWC, mostly with a little flash in the foreground.
I just got an email from a gallery promoting one of Friedlander's images. The text provides a good insight into his style:
"Friedlander’s reputation rests in large part on his portrayal of the "social landscape”, and his depictions of public spaces are often characterized by the dense profusion of elements within them. Friedlander tended towards a compositional style typified by a pleasant jumble of visual information—he gives you a lot to look at. His favored subjects were unassuming situations like this one where, lacking any central drama, the eye is invited to wander, and stitch together its own narrative."
Apples and oranges.Yes, but you could write such pretentious crap about anyones photographs. He is not in the same league as someone like HCB.
Yes, but you could write such pretentious crap about anyones photographs. He is not in the same league as someone like HCB.
Maybe my radar is malfunctioning here but I didn’t find that quote pretentious at all. It was clear and plain-spoken, without artspeak that gets so much pushback.
Yes, but you could write such pretentious crap about anyones photographs. He is not in the same league as someone like HCB.
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