Walker Evans, Resort Photographer at Work, 1941, printed later; gelatin silver print; collection of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles; © Walker Evans Archive, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
While many previous exhibitions of Evans' work have drawn from single collections, Walker Evans features over 300 vintage prints from the 1920s to the 1970s on loan from the important collections at major museums including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Getty Museum, the Museum of Modern Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, the National Gallery of Canada, the Musée du Quai Branly and SFMOMA's own collection, as well as prints from private collections from around the world. More than 100 additional objects and documents, including examples of the artist?s paintings; items providing visual inspiration sourced from Evans' personal collections of postcards, graphic arts, enameled plates, cut images and signage; as well as his personal scrapbooks and ephemera are on display.
While most exhibitions devoted to Walker Evans are presented chronologically, Walker Evans' presentation is thematic. The show begins with an introductory gallery displaying Evans? early modernist work whose style he quickly rejected in favor of focusing on the visual portfolio of everyday life. The exhibition then examines Evans' captivation with the vernacular in two thematic contexts. The first half of the exhibition will focus on many of the subjects that preoccupied Evans throughout his career, including text-based images such as signage, shop windows, roadside stands, billboards and other examples of typography. Iconic images of the Great Depression, workers and stevedores, street photography made surreptitiously on New York City's subways and avenues and classic documentary images of life in America complete this section. By presenting this work thematically, the exhibition links work separated by time and place and highlights Evans' preoccupation with certain subjects and recurrent themes. The objects that moved him were ordinary, mass-produced and intended for everyday use. The same applied to the people he photographed ? the ordinary human faces of office workers, laborers and people on the street.
"The street was an inexhaustible source of poetic finds," describes Chéroux.
The second half of the exhibition explores Evans' fascination with the methodology of vernacular photography, or styles of applied photography that are considered useful, domestic and popular. Examples include architecture, catalog and postcard photography as well as studio portraiture, and the exhibition juxtaposes this work with key source materials from the artist's personal collections of 10,000 postcards, hand-painted signage and graphic ephemera (tickets, flyers, logos and brochures). Here Evans elevates vernacular photography to art, despite his disinclination to create fine art photographs. Rounding out this section are three of Evans? paintings using vernacular architecture as inspiration.
The exhibition concludes with Evans' look at photography itself, with a gallery of photographs that unite Evans' use of the vernacular as both a subject and a method.
About Walker Evans
Born in St. Louis, Walker Evans (1903?1975) was educated at East Coast boarding schools, Williams College, the Sorbonne and College de France before landing in New York in the late 1920s. Surrounded by an influential circle of artists, poets and writers, it was there that he gradually redirected his passion for writing into a career as a photographer, publishing his first photograph in the short-lived avant-garde magazine Alhambra. The first significant exhibition of his work was in 1938, when the Museum of Modern Art, New York presented Walker Evans: American Photographs, the first major solo exhibition at the museum devoted to a photographer.
Walker Evans, Labor Anonymous, Fortune 34, no. 5, November 1946; offset lithography; Centre Pompidou, Musée national d'art moderne, Paris, Bibliothèque Kandinsky, Collection of David Campany; © Walker Evans Archive, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
In the 50 years that followed, Evans produced some of the most iconic images of his time, contributing immensely to the visibility of American culture in the 20th century and the documentary tradition in American photography. Evans' best known photographs arose from his work for the Farm Security Administration (FSA), in which he documented the hardships and poverty of Depression-era America using a large-format, 8 x 10-inch camera. These photographs, along with his photojournalism projects from the 1940s and 1950s, his iconic visual cataloguing of the common American and his definition of the 'documentary style,' have served as a monumental influence to generations of photographers and artists.
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