9780922233526-0922233527-Walker Evans: Last Photographs & Life Stories

Walker Evans: Last Photographs & Life Stories

ISBN-13: 9780922233526
ISBN-10: 0922233527
Author: Michael Lesy, Laura Lindgren
Publication date: 2022
Publisher: Blast Books
Format: Hardcover 176 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780922233526
ISBN-10: 0922233527
Author: Michael Lesy, Laura Lindgren
Publication date: 2022
Publisher: Blast Books
Format: Hardcover 176 pages

Summary

Walker Evans: Last Photographs & Life Stories (ISBN-13: 9780922233526 and ISBN-10: 0922233527), written by authors Michael Lesy, Laura Lindgren, was published by Blast Books in 2022. With an overall rating of 4.1 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Walker Evans: Last Photographs & Life Stories (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $1.24.

Description

Review
Walker Evans is one of the most vaunted American photographers in history. His name is evoked with reverence; his influence continues to shine through in work by contemporary photographers to this day, its imprimatur now firmly established in the canon of American photography.
While Evans’ most well-known output is the kind of “straight” work that [Lincoln] Kirstein described them as, these color photos in Lesy’s book seem to be far more intimate and less studied, more lyrical and personal. There is a real warmth and intimacy to them that the instantaneous nature of the Polaroid helped achieve. But maybe they are also that way because they are the traces of a man on his way out of life embracing his last experiences and encounters. At any rate, I find them to be a penetrating look into the art of an American luminary. Lesy’s book extends that feeling in its second half by compiling portraits and stories of key figures in Evans’s life.
Of particular interest to me are the color portraits that Evans made with the SX-70. These are presented along with other Polaroids that deal with some of the familiar themes his earlier work dealt with. But the portraits seem more vulnerable and intimate. Evans made these portraits at parties where he mingled with friends and students.
If you’re not careful, you’ll find yourself crawling down a rabbit hole reading all of these stories. That’s exactly what happened to me while paging through the book. I got so enthralled with the stories, it was an hour and a half before I lifted my head from the pages the first time I encountered the book! -- Kenneth Dickerman ― Washington Post
For most viewers, Walker Evans will always be a man of the 1930s, an era-defining genius who lost his way as life changed. Yet his late work—and particularly the images he made using a Polaroid SX-70 in 1973-74, just before his death in 1975—has had admirers, passionate but rare. . . . Flat, deeply shadowed, eerie, they resonate with a desperate immediacy that seems more in keeping with contemporary sensibilities than does the classical austerity of the more renowned work of four decades earlier. -- Barry Schwabsky ― Bookforum
Walker Evans (1903–75) was one of the greatest of 20th-century American photographers. His images of people and scenes of rural and urban life during the Great Depression have become our collective visual memory of the era. Historian/biographer Lesy’s . . . highly readable biography is enriched by the author’s personal connection with Evans. Lesy met the photographer (the encounter is vividly sketched here) in Evans’s last years, an éminence grise still actively making pictures, teaching, and creatively experimenting. Life stories constitute the major part of this biography, filled with intimate and frank details about Evans and his friends, colleagues, and lovers. Includes over 50 of Evans’s late-career, color, SX-70 Polaroid instant-film images. VERDICT: An excellent and accessible brief introduction that is a personal glimpse into the life of Evans and his circle.
Toward the end of his life, Walker Evans began using a Polaroid camera. The images he photographed were distinct from the stark black-and-white shots he built his name on in the 30s and 40s…. By contrast, the Polaroid shots had an eerie warmth to them. The instant camera had its shortcomings — bleached colors and imprecision — but he found an elegance in street arrows and faces and junkyard detritus. The photos served as a curious and elegiac capstone to a career that ended with his death in 1975. . . . Lesy and Evans met in the early 70s when both were teaching at Yale. By then Evans no longer had the same presence in American photography he once did, but in a way that was liberating, and the flexibility the camera gave him was a useful tool for his seeking spirit. . . . If Lesy has an overarching interest in writing this book beyond the Polaroids . . . , it’s in showing the lifelong intersection of Evans’ work with the p

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