Tuesday, June 24, 2014

John Gossage - Who Do You Love



Who Do You Love presents a tightly curated group of unique, never-before-seen pieces - photographic distractions, in the words of the artist - from the 1990s, culled from hundreds made over the course of that decade. Using simple materials, they push at the edge between collage and straight photography, not sitting squarely in either space. A traditional photographic image takes you “elsewhere” and “previously”; the photographic frame acts as a threshold to another place and time. By presenting each image unobscurred but in tandem with collage-like elements and handmade marks, Gossage breaks the basic photographic illusion and directs one’s attention back to the surface of the work - to the present - with a rare sophistication. These twelve works survey a decade-long artistic practice that occurred concurrently with a straight photographic discipline.

The publication includes a conversation between the artist and Darius Himes. John Gossage (b. 1946) was born in New York and is based in Washington D. C. His first monograph, The Pond (1985), was recently reissued; other notable titles include Stadt Des Schwarz (1987); There and Gone (1997); Snake Eyes (2002); Berlin in the Time of the Wall (2004); and The Thirty-Two Inch Ruler/Map of Babylon (2010). His work is in the permanent collections of The Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Sprengel Museum, Hannover, among others. A major exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago is planned for early 2015.

Edition of 500 Perfect bound with affixed boards, 12 color reproductions, 32pp. Fraenkel Gallery, July, 2014 Trade Edition: $40

Get this book. John Gossage never puts a foot, a photograph or a photobook wrong. You can get a copy of Who Do You Love direct from the Fraenkel Gallery HERE.

1 comment:

Thorsten said...

Very nice recommendation, Harvey. Would have loved to get this, but unfortunately postage from the US to me is more expensive than the book itself...