“When people ask me what I do, I say that I’m taking pictures of life today.”
—William Eggleston
來源
紐約Cheim & Read畫廊
過往展覽
Through You: Photography Selections from the Martin Z. Margulies Collection, Charles Addams Fine Arts Gallery, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, 4 September – 24 October 2008
文學
Prodger, William Eggleston: Portraits, pl. 54 University of Pennsylvania, Through You: Photography Selections from the Martin Z. Margulies Collection, exhibition catalogue, p. 9
William Eggleston's highly saturated, vivid images, predominantly capturing the American South, highlight the beauty and lush diversity in the unassuming everyday. Although influenced by legends of street photography Robert Frank and Henri Cartier-Bresson, Eggleston broke away from traditional black and white photography and started experimenting with color in the late 1960s.
At the time, color photography was widely associated with the commercial rather than fine art — something that Eggleston sought to change. His 1976 exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, Color Photographs, fundamentally shifted how color photography was viewed within an art context, ushering in institutional acceptance and helping to ensure Eggleston's significant legacy in the history of photography.