“William Eggleston, American Color”, exhibition in IMS-RJ

Master of color photography, William Eggleston, who rarely travels or gives interviews, comes to Brazil for the opening of the exhibition in Rio de Janeiro

Do portfólio The Seventies: volume 2, 1972

from the portfolio The Seventies: volume 2, 1972

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William Eggleston, American Color

March 14th to June 28th, 2015

Curated by Thyago Nogueira

 

opening featuring the artist’s presence,

March 14th, Saturday, 5 pm

screening of William Eggleston in the Real World (2006), a documentary film by Michael Almereyda, and the launch of the catalogue

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Starting March 14th, Instituto Moreira Salles/Rio de Janeiro presents William Eggleston, American Color, the first large solo exhibition in South America dedicated to American photographer William Eggleston. The exhibit will feature around 170 original photos coming from famous collections including the Museum of Modern Art in New York (MoMA), the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston (MFAH), Eggleston Artistic Trust, Cheim & Read and Victoria Miro galleries.

William Eggleston is one of the most important artists in the history of photography. His vibrant and most famous images depict day-to-day life in small cities and suburbs of the American south, constructing an inventory of American culture in the 1960s and ‘70s. Eggleston opened new ground for photography by combining a focus on the symbols of modernization (roads, cars, supermarkets, billboards, shopping malls, parking lots, fashion), a particular use of color saturation and a diaristic approach while documenting friends, family members and anonymous characters.

William Eggleston first found success in 1976, when the influential John Szarkowski, at the time the director of the photography department at MoMA, organized an exhibition of his color photos at the institution. Up until then, black and white photography was the norm. The exhibition, which presented ordinary scenes, a freedom in formal composition and the seductive nature of color – at the time most often seen in amateur and commercial photography–, became the subject of an intense debate in the photography community, and was subjected to harsh criticism. Over the years, however, the exhibition came to be seen as a milestone.

 

Memphis, 1971 // do livro Guia de William Eggleston, 1976

Memphis, 1971 // from the book William Eggleston’s Guide, 1976

 

Today, Eggleston’s images are among the most celebrated and influential in 20th century photography, with a wide variety of admirers: from photographer Nan Goldin and musician David Byrne to filmmaker Wim Wenders and Brazilian artist Karim Aïnouz. Such movies as Gus Van Sant’s Elephant were notoriously inspired by the photographer’s visual world. Both Van Sant and David Byrne have invited Eggleston to collaborate on projects.

William Eggleston, American Color is one of the biggest exhibitions ever done on the photographer and will bring to Brazil for the first time an extensive selection of works from 1960s and ‘70s, considered to be Eggleston’s golden years. One of the rooms will feature many of the photos included in the legendary 1976 exhibition at MoMA. Two other rooms will present the famous portfolio Los Alamos, which resulted from a series of road trips around the Mississippi Delta and all the way to California from 1965 to 1974.

The photos on display will include over 150 rare and delicate photographs made through dye-transfer, a near-extinct printing technique, which became the artist’s trademark for allowing him a precise control of color and intense saturation. To those who are already familiar with Eggleston’s work, the exhibition will also feature lesser-known, but still important works from the period. Among them, the formidable set of portraits made on bars and streets with a large format camera in 1974 and known as 5×7, in reference to the size of the film used. A set of five black and white photos, made before Eggleston embraced color definitively, will also be on display. The experimental film Stranded in Canton, shot in black and white in 1973 and 1974, with improvisations, performances and intimate footage of family members and friends in the bars of New Orleans will also be on view.

William Eggleston, American Color was curated by Thyago Nogueira, editor of the ZUM magazine and coordinator of contemporary photography for the IMS. The exhibition design was created by Martin Corullon of the firm Metro Associados, and the visual identity was designed by graphic artist Luciana Facchini.

 

eggleston William Eggleston, a cor americana
Organized by Thyago Nogueira
With texts of Thyago Nogueira, David Byrne,
Geoff Dyer, Richard Woodward & John Szarkowski (in Portuguese)
Dimensions: 22,5 x 31cm
Number of pages: 156
ISBN: 978-85-8346-021-3
Price: R$ 129,90
Buy here

 

About the photographer

William Eggleston was born in Memphis, Tennessee in 1939. In 1976, MoMA/NY presented the exhibition Photographs, which set Eggleston reputation as one of the most important photographers of 20th Century. Eggleston won the prestigious Hasselblad Award in 1998 and an Infinity Award from the International Center of Photography in 2004. His work has been the object of numerous books, including William Eggleston´s Guide (1976), Chromes (2011) and Los Alamos revisited (2012). In 2008, the Whitney Museum of American Art held one of the largest retrospectives of his work. In 2002, dOCUMENTA in Kassel displayed a selection of his photos. The Eggleston Artistic Trust, which preserves and disseminates his work, was founded in 1992 in Memphis, where the artist lives and works.

 

Events

In the lectures, given among the exhibition’s works, thinkers of photography are going to talk about  William Eggleston’s work (in Portuguese):

April 10th, Friday, 5pm – Nelson Brissac Peixoto (PUC-SP)
May 13th, Wednesday, 5pm – Antonio Fatorelli (ECO-UFRJ)

 

 

exhibition___________________________________________________________________________________________________

William Eggleston, American Color

opening featuring the artist’s presence
March 14th, Saturday, 5pm.
screening of William Eggleston in the Real World (2006), a documentary film by Michael Almereyda, and the launch of the catalogue

visitation
March 14th to June 28th
Tuesday to Sunday, from 11am to 8pm

Instituto Moreira Salles – Rio de Janeiro
Rua Marquês de São Vicente, 476, Gávea
Phone: (21) 3284-7400/ (21) 3206-2500

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Read the article “O inventor da fotografia colorida” (in Portuguese), with William Eggleston’s photos and Thomas Weski’s text, originally published in revista ZUM#2.

 

Press info:

Bárbara Giacomet de Aguiar – (11) 3371-4490
barbara.aguiar@ims.com.br

Andressa Lelli – (11) 3371-4424
comunicacao@ims.com.br

Da série Los Alamos, 1965-1968 e 1972-1974

from the series Los Alamos, 1965-1968 and 1972-1974

 

c. 1971-1973 // do portfólio Troubled Waters, 1980

c. 1971-1973 // from the portfolio Troubled Waters, 1980

Sumner, Mississippi, com o riacho Cassidy ao fundo, c. 1969 // do livro Guia de William Eggleston, 1976

Sumner, Mississippi, Cassidy Bayou in the background, c. 1969 // from William Eggleston’s Guide, 1976

c. 1971-1973 // do portfólio Troubled Waters, 1980

c. 1971-1973 // from the portfolio Troubled Waters, 1980

IMAGES © Eggleston Artistic Trust. Courtesy Cheim & Read, New York.