Your favourite Lee Friedlander books

The Long Walk

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The Long Walk

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Trellis in garden

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Trellis in garden

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Giant Witness Tree

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Giant Witness Tree

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at the mall

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at the mall

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  • May 1, 2025
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35mm 616 Portrait

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35mm 616 Portrait

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lauffray

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I like Friedlander's work, and I was browsing some of his books online and was a bit overwhelmed by the number of publications.

Do you guys have any favourites or recommendations ?

I'm mostly interested in his BW work, the portraits (self-portraits a little less), nudes, car and travel pictures. Generally not a big fan of massive coffee table books
 

ic-racer

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I like Factory Valleys. That is probably because the book came out when I was in graduate school. I recognized some familiar landmarks in the book and I recognized places that I had also photographed.
 

David Allen

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Lee Friedlander Photographs. New City, NY: Self-published / Haywire Press, 1978 was the first book that got me interested in Friedlander's work. I also really enjoyed The American Monument. New York: Eakins Press Foundation, 1976. ISBN 0-87130-043-5 which I used look at every Saturday in the Photographers Gallery in London until some swine bought it! - should have bought it myself (didn't have any money at the time) as it now costs over 2,500€ upwards.

The Desert Seen. New York: Distributed Art Publishers, 1996. ISBN 1-881616-75-4 made a very interesting change in direction (Ansel Adams on LSD as one critic described it). Lee Friedlander: Sticks and Stones: Architectural America. San Francisco: Fraenkel Gallery, 2004. ISBN 1-891024-97-3. By Friedlander and James Enyeart followed in this style but in the urban environment.

However, I find that there are now too many narrowly themed books coming out that I do not find anywhere near as interesting.

The best overview of his work (unfortunately a coffee table style of publication) is Friedlander, Published by The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Text by Peter Galassi. Afterword by Richard Benson.

Bests,

David.
www.dsallen.de
 

David Allen

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ajmiller

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One of the first photobooks I bought was Friedlander's 'American Musicians', photographs taken from the 50's through to the 70's while he was house photographer for Atlantic Records. It contains both B&W and colour. The thing that strikes me is the intimate, personal nature of the portraits. As record producer Joel Dorn rightly says in the intro - "His pictures not only defined those singers and musicians as artists for me, but as people." Worth a look.
 
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