A Third Look

Author:   Joseph Maida ,  Joseph Maida ,  Zackary Drucker
Publisher:   Convoke
ISBN:  

9781734018080


Pages:   88
Publication Date:   14 April 2022
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
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A Third Look


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Overview

"In A Third Look, Joseph Maida reflects on Lee Friedlander’s nudes from the 1970’s and 80’s, reinterpreting this series as a cutting edge homage both to Friedlander, the modernist titan of photography, and to LGBTQIA+ bodies across gender and identity spectra.  When curator John Szarkowski first presented Friedlander’s nudes in a solo exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in 1991, he wrote that ""the qualities of generosity and openness, and the habit of continual exploration—of logical extemporization enlivened by an unassuming audacity"" make Friedlander’s nudes so ""richly and rewardingly complex."" Maida, viewing the traits of openness, exploration, extemporization, and audacity as queerness itself, reimagined Friedlander’s nudes by picturing different bodies in A Third Look to converse with Friedlander’s.  Maida calls their feminist reclamation of history ""a visual queering of modernist photography, providing a visible reconciliation of where the canon of art photography has historically allowed us to see"" with the broader spectrum of the human nude."

Full Product Details

Author:   Joseph Maida ,  Joseph Maida ,  Zackary Drucker
Publisher:   Convoke
Imprint:   Convoke
ISBN:  

9781734018080


ISBN 10:   1734018089
Pages:   88
Publication Date:   14 April 2022
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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"T: The New York Times Style MagazineMarch 3, 2022 It was in a Borders in Philadelphia in the mid-1990s that the New York-based photographer Joseph Maida first came across a monograph filled with female nudes shot by Lee Friedlander, a catalog of the artist's 1991 exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art. Friedlander had made art's oldest subject somehow alien -- witnessed up close, expanses of skin became strange landscapes interrupted by the mundane mise-en-scènes of domestic spaces: lamps, coffee cups and mismatched bedspreads. Decades after he discovered them, ""Friedlander's nudes continued to haunt me, thrill me, challenge me and disturb me,"" Maida writes in the introduction to ""A Third Look,"" a new monograph of his own work. In its style and title, a reference to Friedlander's 2013 book ""A Second Look,"" it's a paean to its source of inspiration -- Maida even used a 35 mm camera with a wide-angle lens, as Friedlander did. But Maida deployed that tool to examine the male form, and to play with perceptions of gender. In one image, a manicured hand grips a hairy leg; in another, a penis disappears between thighs. As the artist and Maida's former student Zackary Drucker writes in the foreword, the viewer may have the ""uncanny experience of double-taking, thinking, 'Is that a woman?' Clearly they are not ... or are they?"" Our urge to assign labels is as much the subject of these complex images as the nudes themselves."


T: The New York Times Style MagazineMarch 3, 2022 It was in a Borders in Philadelphia in the mid-1990s that the New York-based photographer Joseph Maida first came across a monograph filled with female nudes shot by Lee Friedlander, a catalog of the artist's 1991 exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art. Friedlander had made art's oldest subject somehow alien -- witnessed up close, expanses of skin became strange landscapes interrupted by the mundane mise-en-scenes of domestic spaces: lamps, coffee cups and mismatched bedspreads. Decades after he discovered them, Friedlander's nudes continued to haunt me, thrill me, challenge me and disturb me, Maida writes in the introduction to A Third Look, a new monograph of his own work. In its style and title, a reference to Friedlander's 2013 book A Second Look, it's a paean to its source of inspiration -- Maida even used a 35 mm camera with a wide-angle lens, as Friedlander did. But Maida deployed that tool to examine the male form, and to play with perceptions of gender. In one image, a manicured hand grips a hairy leg; in another, a penis disappears between thighs. As the artist and Maida's former student Zackary Drucker writes in the foreword, the viewer may have the uncanny experience of double-taking, thinking, 'Is that a woman?' Clearly they are not ... or are they? Our urge to assign labels is as much the subject of these complex images as the nudes themselves.


Author Information

Joseph Maida is an artist, writer, and educator, who chairs the BFA Photography and Video Department at New York's School of Visual Arts. Maida has exhibited his work extensively in the United States, Europe, Japan and China in solo exhibitions at  Wallspace, Daniel Cooney Fine Art, the Nikon Salons, Tokyo and Osaka, and 403 International Art Center, Wuhan, among others. Maida's work has also been included in group exhibitions in New York at the International Center for Photography (ICP); Yancey Richardson Gallery; Art in General; Artists Space; the Queens Museum; and the Bronx Museum and internationally at Foam Fotografiemuseum, Amsterdam; the Reina Sofia Museum, Madrid; the Kunsthalle Wien; the Witte de With, Rotterdam; C/O Berlin; and the Photographers’ Gallery, London, among others. Maida's commissioned work has appeared in publications such as The New York Times Magazine, New York Magazine, W, Wallpaper*, and Vice, and Maida's monographs New Natives and Born Free and Equal were published by L’Artiere (Bologna, Italy) in 2015 and CONVOKE (New York, NY) in 2018 respectively. Maida earned his BA summa cum laude in architecture and art history from Columbia University and his MFA in photography from Yale University. Zackary Drucker (born 1983) is an independent artist, cultural producer, and trans woman who breaks down the way we think about gender, sexuality, and seeing. She has performed and exhibited her work internationally in museums, galleries, and film festivals including the Whitney Biennial 2014, MoMA PS1, Hammer Museum, Art Gallery of Ontario, MCA San Diego, and SF MoMA, among others. Drucker is an Emmy-nominated Producer for the docu-series This Is Me, as well as a Producer on Golden Globe and Emmy-winning Transparent.

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