Lee Friedlander - A Ramble in Olmsted Parks
22 gennaio - 11 maggio 2008, New York
On the occasion of the 150th anniversary of the design for Central Park, Frederick Law Olmsted’s 843-acre New York City masterpiece, The Metropolitan Museum of Art will present Lee Friedlander: A Ramble in Olmsted Parks. The exhibition will feature 36 photographs, most never before on public display. Friedlander describes these striking photographs, culled from a 20-year exploration of public parks and private estates designed by North America’s premier landscape architect, as -one photographer’s pleasurable and wandering glances at places that bear the great vision of Mr. Olmsted.- Renowned for his complex, idiosyncratic picture-making, Lee Friedlander began photographing parks designed by Olmsted for a 1988 commission from the Canadian Centre for Architecture in Montreal. The artist’s interest in landscape, however, began much earlier, and he continued to photograph Olmsted parks long after he completed the commission. In addition to numerous photographs of Central Park, Friedlander’s series encompasses many other famous and beloved landscapes by Olmsted, including: Brooklyn’s Prospect Park; Manhattan’s Morningside Park; World’s End in Hingham, Massachusetts; and Cherokee Park in Louisville, Kentucky. Rambling with his camera through the parks’ open meadows and dense understory, Friedlander finds pure pleasure in Olmsted’s landscapes - in the meticulous stonework, in the careful balance of sun and shade, and in the mature, weather-beaten trees and their youthful issue. With this series, the artist has also explored a variety of camera formats that provide surprising perspectives on each park’s intricate balance of features, especially the overlapping layers of trees, leaves, grasses, architecture. The photographs offer fresh appreciation for Olmsted parks as invented worlds designed to delight the eye and offer, as Olmsted wrote, -healthful recreation- for the public. By providing worthy testimony to our era’s renewed interest in preserving the finest landscape architecture of the nineteenth century, Friedlander’s black-and-white photographs celebrate the essential pleasures of seeing and being in these living works of art. Info: tel +1 212 5703951 fax +1 212 4722764 e-mail: communications@metmuseum.org; www.metmuseum.org