Photographers in Focus: Stephen Shore

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American documentary photographer Stephen Shore will be honored at this year’s Photo London as the Master of Photography—an award bestowed on leading contemporary artists who have made an exceptional contribution to photography. Alongside a headline talk, Shore will also debut Details, his latest series of images that capture found arrangements of natural material and street debris.

Since taking up photography at the age of six, Shore has published over 25 monographs that showcase his unconventional framing and subject matter: parked cars, gas stations, public signs, desolate streets, hotel rooms, uneaten meals… All the while, his unique frame of vision blurs the line between observational and documentary photography.

Shore’s interest in daily life and common objects began when, at the age of 17, he became the de facto photographer in residence at Andy Warhol’s studio and creative epicentre, The Factory. Shore’s early work humanised pop icons like Lou Reed, Paul Morrissey and Edie Sedgwick who frequented the Manhattan space. Instead of glorifying them, Shore’s images labored over the quiet, interstitial moments between The Factory’s famous film shoots and hedonistic gatherings.

Fifty years of empty chairs and cracked pavements later, the work of the ever-evolving photographer has transitioned to Instagram, with his social feed being foregrounded during his MoMa retrospective in 2018. It is of no wonder that his work has flourished on a platform that fulfils Warhol’s prophecy that everyone in the future will have their fifteen minutes of fame. As part of Photo London, Shore will be exhibiting his classic work Los Angeles, California, February 4th, 1969, a series of photos taken over the course of one day that, like social media, chronicles the minutiae of everyday existence.

As part of this editorial partnership with Photo London, NOWNESS is putting on a special program of screenings—including this Photographers in Focus episode on Stephen Shore—and a live panel discussion with NOWNESS creative director Bunny Kinney, Emmy-nominated Freddie Paxton, photographer Yumna Al-Arashi, and artist Maisie Cousins.

Photo London runs from 16 – 19 May at Somerset House, London.

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6 Comments
  1. Joseph Delgadillo says

    Stephen Shore is a genius, love his work

  2. Kuhoo Not Kuhu says

    I really really like these pictures. Finally, I found a photographer whose work I actually resonate with. And I dont have to alter my view of the world to fit into the ideal aesthetics of photography. His pictures are raw, not mundane and unique. They are exactly how archives should be, not arranged in a symmetry but left how they were supposed to be. The rawness represents movements to me which you can only understand when wr think of how the subject got there the way it is. There isnt much to explain. It is plain observation.
    This is what it is to me.

  3. Sach Dhanjal says

    song id at 4:00 anyone?

  4. Little Owl Loves says

    Great video! I am excited to look more at his work. The nostalgia and the way he captured that time is incredible 😌

  5. Okay, so I'll take pictures? 'But' in this world, with clouds, instead of hardcopies, is a picture, "still" worth a thousand words?

  6. Darren Crabb says

    Excellent.. Instant add to my Youtube Playlist 🙂

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