Thursday, May 17, 2007

Saul Leiter


© 1959, Saul Leiter


© 1960, Saul Leiter

Quando falamos de autores que recorreram ao uso da cor na fotografia, é normal associarmos nomes como William Eggleston ou Stephen Shore. Mas, como é óbvio, já outros autores faziam uso dos filmes de cor disponiveis comercialmente quer para os profissionais, quer para os designados amadores. Autores como Luigi Ghirri (de quem falei num dos primeiros posts que fiz) e Saul Leiter entre outros.
A Steidl editou muito recentemente um excelente e muito recomendável livro sobre o trabalho a cor de Leiter, intitulado Early Color.

Deixo um pequeno texto em inglês que recolhi de vários sites.

Saul Leiter began his adult life studying at the Cleveland Theological College, but eventually moved to New York to work as a painter. There he began taking pictures, working with 35mm colour on the streets of New York in the late 1940s. Leiter’s work was exhibited by Edward Steichen at the Museum of Modern Art just a few years later, in 1953.

Leiter’s color work was virtually unmatched during the 1940s and 1950s. His improvisational, spontaneous street approach found him floating from one beautiful, often somewhat abstract image to another. This seems a perfect match for the be-bop rhythm of the New York City of his time.

Though he continued to paint, exhibiting alongside Philip Guston and Willem de Kooning, Leiter’s camera became — like an extension of his arm and mind — an ever-present interpreter of life in the metropolis.

Although Edward Steichen exhibited some of Saul Leiter’s color photographs at the Museum of Modern Art in 1953, for forty years afterwards they remained virtually unknown to the art world. Saul Leiter: Early Color provides the first opportunity to see a comprehensive presentation of images by one of photography’s great originals.

1 comment:

Madalena Lello said...

É sempre com o maior prazer que leio os seus post. Não conhecia Saul Leiter, e por coincidência falo também em cor no meu último post sobre o trabalho do Mikhailov.