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Gitterman Gallery is proud to present an exhibition of never before exhibited color
photographs by Adam Bartos. The exhibition will open with an artist's reception on
Wednesday, February 29th from 6 to 8 p.m. and continue through Saturday, May 5th. The
exhibition includes both work he made in North and East Africa and Mexico in the early 1980s
and recent photographs Bartos made in Long Island, New York between 2007-2010. This is
Bartos first exhibition with the gallery.
Bartos interest in the 19th century travel work of Samuel Bourne, Robert MacPherson, and
others, led him to Egypt, Kenya, and Mexico with a large format camera and color film. His
images are thoroughly modern, yet their energy is inspired by the lucid depiction of form and
light that the earlier photographers achieved. His attention to the picture plane creates a
tension that resonates between the photograph as both his expression of a place and an
object in and of itself. None of the photographs are constructed wholly from incident or
narrative. As Geoff Dyer notes in the introduction to Bartos book Boulevard: "his
pictures are
like self-portraits of the things in them."
The same impulse is present in his recent work, although the subject matter is found much
closer to home, in Long Island. These images have been printed using a four-color carbon
transfer process that, with its tonal range and description of fine detail, emphasizes Bartos
subtle color palette and formal compositions.
Adam Bartos was born in New York City in 1953. He attended NYU film school with the
intention of becoming a cinematographer. Bartos work has been exhibited widely and he has
published several books, including: International Territory (Verso, 1994), which looks
at the
aging modern architecture of the United Nations headquarters and, implicitly, the ideals
which created it; Kosmos (Princeton Architectural Press, 2001), a then inconceivable
look
into the Russian space program; Boulevard (Steidldangin, 2005), a dialogue between
Paris
and Los Angeles; Yard Sale Photographs (Damiani Editore 2009) and Darkroom (Steidldangin,
2012), which examines the analog darkroom. His work is in the collection of the J. Paul Getty
Museum, Los Angeles; the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; the Museum of Modern Art, New
York; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; the San Francisco Museum of Modern
Art, and others.
Press coverage:
Links open PDF files (get Acrobat
Reader)
The
Wall Street Journal
The New Yorker
ARTnews
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