Early Landscape Details episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 7, 2021 · 1 MIN

Early Landscape Details

from George Eastman Museum · host George Eastman Museum

During his early years, Carl Chiarenza started moving closer and closer to his subjects, resulting in photographs that looked more and more abstract. Here he is discussing that transition with LensWork magazine editor Brooks Jensen in 2000: Well, when I started making serious photographs, after I got through with the photojournalism stuff and got back on some kind of track, I was really trying to work in the tradition of Minor [White] and Edward [Weston] and Ansel [Adams]. And I used to go out daily with Paul Caponigro—we lived together for a while—and we would go out to various parts of New England and photograph. He would always come back with wonderful landscape pictures and I would always come back with mosquito bites… and halfway decent pictures. But, you know, it took a long time for me to understand that that was not where I was going to be able to function, in terms of expressing what I needed to express. Because I didn't know any other way, there was no other way open to me but that tradition I inherited. So until I found myself getting smaller and smaller and smaller in terms of the parts of the world that I was looking at and closer and closer and closer that I began to understand that I wasn’t really interested in this landscape as a picture. Though I loved the landscape, it wasn’t that that was my picture. So I began making pictures that were smaller and smaller, more and more abstract Source: LensWork Interview (2000)

During his early years, Carl Chiarenza started moving closer and closer to his subjects, resulting in photographs that looked more and more abstract. Here he is discussing that transition with LensWork magazine editor Brooks Jensen in 2000: Well, when I started making serious photographs, after I got through with the photojournalism stuff and got back on some kind of track, I was really trying to work in the tradition of Minor [White] and Edward [Weston] and Ansel [Adams]. And I used to go out daily with Paul Caponigro—we lived together for a while—and we would go out to various parts of New England and photograph. He would always come back with wonderful landscape pictures and I would always come back with mosquito bites… and halfway decent pictures. But, you know, it took a long time for me to understand that that was not where I was going to be able to function, in terms of expressing what I needed to express. Because I didn't know any other way, there was no other way open to me but that tradition I inherited. So until I found myself getting smaller and smaller and smaller in terms of the parts of the world that I was looking at and closer and closer and closer that I began to understand that I wasn’t really interested in this landscape as a picture. Though I loved the landscape, it wasn’t that that was my picture. So I began making pictures that were smaller and smaller, more and more abstract Source: LensWork Interview (2000)

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During his early years, Carl Chiarenza started moving closer and closer to his subjects, resulting in photographs that looked more and more abstract. Here he is discussing that transition with LensWork magazine editor Brooks Jensen in 2000: Well,...

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