Lee Friedlander (1934)
Lee Friedlander was born in 1934 in Aberdeen, Washington, a small lumber town on the Pacific Northwest coast that offered little in the way of artistic stimulation but much in the way of American ordinariness. It was precisely this ordinariness, the clutter and texture of everyday life in the United States, that would become his […]
Read MoreLarry Clark (1943)
Larry Clark was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in 1943, into a world that would become both the setting and the subject of his most important work. His mother worked as an itinerant baby photographer, travelling from door to door across the state to photograph infants and toddlers for their families. Clark accompanied her from a […]
Read MoreGarry Winogrand (1928 – 1984)
Garry Winogrand was born on January 14, 1928, in the Bronx, New York, into a working-class Jewish family. His father worked in the leather goods trade, and the neighbourhood in which Winogrand grew up was dense, loud, and teeming with the kind of street-level human theatre that would later become the raw material of his […]
Read MoreLarry Sultan (1946 – 2009)
Larry Sultan made his most important work in the place that most artists spend their careers trying to escape: his parents’ house. Born in Brooklyn in 1946, raised in the San Fernando Valley of Southern California, and educated at the University of California, Berkeley, and the San Francisco Art Institute during the ferment of the […]
Read MoreMartin Parr (1952 – 2025)
Martin Parr has spent five decades turning his camera on the rituals, vanities, and absurdities of modern life, producing a body of work that is at once hilarious and deeply uncomfortable. Born in Epsom, Surrey, in 1952, he was introduced to photography by his grandfather, George Parr, an enthusiastic amateur whose influence steered the young […]
Read MoreRobert Frank
Robert Frank arrived in the United States in 1947 with a Swiss passport, a working knowledge of several European photographic traditions, and an eye that would transform the medium forever. Born in Zürich in 1924 to a Jewish family of German descent, he had apprenticed with photographers in Switzerland and learned the discipline of careful, […]
Read MoreNan Goldin (1953)
Nan Goldin picked up a camera at the age of fifteen and never put it down. Born Nancy Goldin in Washington, D.C., in 1953, she was raised in a comfortable suburban household whose outward respectability concealed a private tragedy that would shape everything she made. Her older sister Barbara committed suicide at the age of […]
Read MoreDiane Arbus (1923 -1971)
Diane Arbus changed the possibilities of the photographic portrait forever. Born Diane Nemerov in 1923 to a wealthy Jewish family that owned Russeks, a fashionable Fifth Avenue department store, she grew up insulated from the rougher textures of American life. That insulation became, paradoxically, the engine of her art. From an early age she felt […]
Read MoreStephen Shore
Stephen Shore arrived at photography with the certainty of a prodigy and the curiosity of a born observer. Born in New York City in 1947, he received his first darkroom kit at the age of six and began teaching himself the craft that would define his life’s work. By the time he was ten, a […]
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