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Stranger Passing: Collected Portraits by Joel Sternfeld
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Stranger Passing is a collection of some 65
large (40" X 50") color photographs by Joel Sternfeld taken over the last
fifteen years. These elegantly composed and executed portraits are almost all placed
outdoors in a landscape or cityscape and the play of subject against background is
significant. (Even one of the few indoor shots is surely an interior landscape, taken in a
large corporate real estate office where the rows of desks receding into the background
are adorned with a series of identical large floral arrangements.) The title, with a bow
to Whitman, refers to the photographer passing through the byways of America, asking
people to have their pictures taken, and it is surely intended to apply as well to the
subjects themselves--Sternfeld's vision is sympathetic, but it also lends a surreal tone
to many of these portraits, as if he were examining insects revealed under a turned log.
These are neither candid nor spur-of-the-moment photographs; at least
to some extent choices were surely made about setting and perhaps other elements, though
these feel neither forced nor inappropriate. Sternfeld does not appear to deal in the kind
of hyper-manipulated image making sometimes seen in contemporary photography. If there is
strangeness, it was there for Sternfeld to find and record. All of the pictures are taken
from about the same distance and all the subjects are looking directly at the camera, a
formal uniformity that unites the wild diversity of the subjects in the collection.
Two Men Comparing Palm Pilots are in Silcon Valley
(techie types are well represented in the collection); they seem serious, motivated, as if
the photographer has, perhaps, interrupted a pitch for venture capital. They are also
Asian; Sternfeld's collection covers the gamut not only of race, but of age, economic
status, and sexual orientation as well. Domestic Worker Setting the Table is a
somewhat grim, uniformed and aproned black woman setting out an elegant luncheon on a
Manhattan terrace, the Central Park reservoir and skyline suggesting her employers'
vantage point of privilege which she enters only as servant. Summer Interns Having
Lunch are young guys on Wall Street decked out in establishment costumes: dark suits,
suspenders, expensive ties--tomorrow's captains of finance, paying their dues and, for
now, having hot dogs for lunch.
Many of the subjects present grim expressions, revealing of
hardscrabble lives (A Woman Selling the Sunday Papers) or the toll of age and/or
experience (A Woman with a Wreath). But some suggest more optimism--A Family
in the Doorway of Their Home is a mixed race couple with their two kids; their
not quite finished new home suggests a positive future. Most joyous of all, A Mother
Playing with her Daughter is all smiles and fun in a funky New Mexico backyard.
Sometimes the effect is in the details. A Farmer Taking a Break
is almost androgynous, leaning against her thresher in the midst of the corn, smoking a
cigarette. The latter detail becomes more telling when the full title is read: She Has
Cancer of the Thyroid. Sometimes the effect is in unexpected contrasts: A Woman
Pumping Gasoline is garbed in multicolored, multipatterned African splendor. Two
Men on Vacation in Bigfork, Montana are in matching cowboy drag, but one
carries a fussy little Yorkshire terrier, betraying, perhaps, their more urban domicile. A
Man and His Son After Marching in the Gay Pride Parade offers Dad, in full drag and
makeup, whose Son in a stroller could belong to any ordinary parent. As, for that
matter could the kid riding in the sidecar with his Hell's Angels-type dad driving the
bike (Motorcyclists).
And then there is the wonderfully weird or funny. A Woman out
Shopping with her Pet Rabbit -- why is she carrying the beastie with her
while shopping? or is she just picking it up at the vet? Does she have color coordinated
beastie carrying cases for all of her shopping outfits?
If the woman with the rabbit is memorably odd, the image that will
perhaps remain in memory longest is A Homeless Man with his Bedding -- shirtless,
with a grizzled beard, his grimy quilt draped across his shoulder, he looks like some sort
of prophet of the streets, almost biblical until you notice his red running shoes.
- Arthur Lazere