This book presents over five decades of Clara Gutsche's photographic practice. Her journey in the photographic arts began in 1970 when she moved to Montreal from St. Louis and purchased a 35mm camera. Initially, Gutsche used photography to map and understand her new city and neighborhood. By 1972, she had embraced a new 4×5 view camera, a choice that would define her artistic style for decades. Gutsche's work often explores personal relationships, urban landscapes, architecture, and cultural values, with a focus on the realities behind appearances; in her words, "Whether I photograph people or uninhabited spaces, I attempt to map the inner landscape of emotions as well as describe specific places." Notable series include "Milton Park" (1970-73), which aimed to save a threatened Montreal neighborhood; "Convents" (1990-2009), a deep dive into communities of nuns in Quebec; and commissions to document both crumbling industrial infrastructure and the construction of Montreal's famed Canadian Centre for Architecture founded by Phyllis Lambert.
Co-published with Scotiabank Photography Award, Toronto
Sprache
Verlagsort
Illustrationen
Maße
Höhe: 310 mm
Breite: 254 mm
Dicke: 26 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-3-96999-452-8 (9783969994528)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Autor*in
Clara Gutsche has worked as a photographer, educator and critic since arriving in Montreal from St. Louis, via Oberlin College and Boston, in 1970. Over the 54-year span of her practice, she has explored multiple modes of subjectivity-inflected documentary photography through portraiture, urban landscapes and architectural interiors. Gutsche has exhibited extensively and her photographs are held in the collections of the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, the Canadian Centre for Architecture, the National Gallery of Canada, and the Musée de la Photographie à Charleroi in Belgium, among other institutions. Her criticism has appeared in publications such as Photo communiqué, Vanguard, C Magazine and Canadian Art; in 2021 she contributed a chapter to Photogenic Montreal: Activisms and Archives in a Post-Industrial City.