Arm Chair Photographer: Doug Rickard at Yossi Milo Gallery

Arm Chair Photographer: Doug Rickard

Chelsea’s art openings started  with Doug Rickard’s photographs at Yossi Milo Gallery.  Although I’ve seen several of Rickard’s images at MoMA last year, these photographs resonated for me now and I enjoyed them. They depict squalid corners of major American cities: Detroit, Buffalo, Baltimore, as well as a few minor towns, such as Roswell, New Mexico, and are reminiscent of Robert Frank’s seminal The Americans.  The difference here, is that Doug Rickard didn’t take the photographs in a traditional way.  Rather, he observed them from Google Street View, and reprinted them.  As a result, the highly blurry and sometimes extremely pixilated photographs have a appearance of a realist day dream.  There is something about the act of looking–not from the real street but from Street View–that makes these photographs powerful.

 

By
Steve Giovinco

Steve Giovinco

Share
Published by
Steve Giovinco

Recent Posts

Guggenheim Fellowship Plan

“The Realm of the Dead: Capturing the Transformation of Helheim Glacier” Steve Giovinco Project Summary…

4 months ago

AI Misinformation and Photographing Sites of Climate Change

Project Summary I am seeking a Fulbright Fellowship for an interdisciplinary project focused on underrepresented…

4 months ago

Night Landscape Photographs: The Netherlands

The Netherlands: Night Landscape Photographs, Canals and Sky

4 months ago

Enhancing Your Art Practice with AI: A Simple Guide to Using ChatGPT

AI and Artists? It’s Not What You Think… If you are old enough like me…

10 months ago