Carlos Diaz, Latino Immigrant Home, Southwest Detroit: White Fence and Flower Garden, 2010. Courtesy Carlos Diaz and David Klein Gallery, Detroit, MI.
Gardens are the birthplace of some of our most enduring myths and creation stories. Many religions posit the idea of a lush, sacred place where humans once dwelt in harmony with nature, or of a garden that awaits us in the hereafter, as a reward for virtuous living. Gardens are spaces of regeneration and rebirth, refuges from the push-and-pull of urban life, tranquil oases for contemplating and celebrating beauty. They also can serve practical purposes, including growing food, serving as botanical laboratories for scientific study, or displaying a ruler’s taste and power. A new book, The Photographer in the Garden, co-published by the Aperture Foundation and the George Eastman Foundation, explores how the art form of photography took up the theme of gardens and their component parts. The book shows the myriad ways in which photographers have depicted gardens: in minute, documentary-like detail; as elegant still-life works, evocative of the Dutch Golden Age of painting; as abstract, other-worldly forms that challenge our perceptions of line, color, and light; and as anthropomorphized entities that summon our deepest human feelings. In the imagery of photographers as diverse as Eugène Atget, Edward Steichen, Lee Friedlander, Robert Mapplethorpe, Catherine Opie, Nobuyoshi Araki, and many more, we come to see the photographer as a kind of gardener, seeking out the perfect composition, and sculpting it into an object of thoughtfulness and delight.
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Color Dictionaries Gave the World a Common Language—and Names Like ‘Dragons-Blood Red’ and ‘Light Paris Green’
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Attached to an actuator on the shoulder of NASA’s Curiosity Rover exploring Mars right now is a set of panels that looks like an eye shadow compact. It has six …
Thoughts Of a War-Zone Photographer On Using the Lens For Good
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Last March, responding to news of a killing, I found myself walking in the darkness at a crime scene in Quila, a small community outside Culiacán in Sinaloa, the state …
The Sole Surviving Image of the Perilous Journey Provides a Crucial Bridge to History
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On a cold day in late November 1853, in a place called Big Timbers, in what is today southeastern Colorado, a Jewish photographer named Solomon Nunes Carvalho hoisted his ten-pound …
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