Lee Friedlander at Luhring Augustine Gallery

From Boston to San Diego, Lee Friedlander’s black and white photos of urban landscapes turn mundane street scenes into extraordinary coincidences of arranged forms.  In Friedlander’s hands, any vertical object in the environment can bisect a scene into separate vignettes – people standing on the sidewalk as seen through car windows seem to occupy their own separate worlds while on this highway overpass in Dallas, a guardrail divides one location into two radically different places.  45 photos from Friedlander’s 60+ year career selected by filmmaker Joel Coen, now on view at Luhring Augustine Gallery, demonstrate Friedlander’s impressive ability to reframe our view of the world.  (On view through July 28th).

Lee Friedlander, Dallas, gelatin silver print, image 8 ½ x 12 ¾ inches, 1977, printed 2023.

Lee Friedlander, ‘Nudes’ at Pace Gallery

Lee Friedlander, Nude, gelatin silver print, 1980.
Lee Friedlander, Nude, gelatin silver print, 1980.

John Szarkowski, MoMA’s photography director for nearly 30 years, called Lee Friedlander’s nude photos, “… the most unblinkingly, unreservedly candid descriptions of other people’s bodies that serious photography has produced.”  Pace Gallery proves his point with a show of photos from the late 70s to the early 90s that practically interrogate female bodies in their intensity.  (On 57th Street through Dec 22nd).

Lee Friedlander at Pace/MacGill

Lee Friedlander, New York City, gelatin silver print, 2010.
Lee Friedlander, New York City, gelatin silver print, 2010.

Photographer Lee Friedlander returns to his roots by shooting reflective store windows with a 35mm camera in his latest series, titled ‘Mannequin.’  Here, a building’s façade tries to impose its grid on a Dolly-Parton-haired good-time girl while a curtain and rod at the top complicates ideas of public and private space.  (At Pace/MacGill Gallery, 57th Street through Dec 22nd).