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Garry Winogrand

Garry Winogrand was an American street photographer, who portrayed U.S. life and its social issues in the mid-20th century. Photography curator, historian, and critic John Szarkowski called Winogrand the central photographer of his generation.

Early life and education
Winogrand's parents, Abraham and Bertha, Winogrand graduated from high school in 1946 and entered the U.S. Army Air Force. He returned to New York in 1947 and studied painting at City College of New York and painting and photography at Columbia University, also in New York, in 1948. He also attended a photojournalism class taught by Alexey Brodovitch at The New School for Social Research in New York in 1951. ==Career==
Career
Winogrand worked as a freelance photojournalist and advertising photographer in the 1950s and 1960s. Between 1952 and 1954 he freelanced with the PIX Publishing agency in Manhattan on an introduction from Ed Feingersh, and from 1954 at Brackman Associates. His first solo show was held at Image Gallery in New York in 1959. In the 1960s, he photographed in New York City at the same time as contemporaries Lee Friedlander and Diane Arbus. In 1964 Winogrand was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation to travel "for photographic studies of American life". In 1967 his work was included in the "influential" New Documents show at MoMA in New York His photographs of the Bronx Zoo and the Coney Island Aquarium made up his first book The Animals (1969), which observes the connections between humans and animals. He took many of these photos when, as a divorced father, accompanying his young children to the zoo for amusement. He was awarded his second Guggenheim Fellowship in 1969 through the then novel phenomenon of events created specifically for the mass media. Between 1969 and 1976 he photographed at public events, He supported himself in the 1970s by teaching, He moved to Los Angeles in 1978. In 1979 he used his third Guggenheim Fellowship In his book Stock Photographs (1980) he showed "people in relation to each other and to their show animals" at the Fort Worth Fat Stock Show and Rodeo. Szarkowski, the Director of Photography at New York's MoMA, became an editor and reviewer of Winogrand's work. ==Personal life==
Personal life
Winogrand married Adrienne Lubeau in 1952. They had two children, Laurie They were together until 1969. In 1972 he married Eileen Adele Hale, with whom he had a daughter, Melissa. They remained married until his death in 1984. ==Death and legacy==
Death and legacy
Winogrand was diagnosed with gallbladder cancer on February 1, 1984, and went immediately to the Gerson Clinic in Tijuana, Mexico, to seek an alternative cure (6,000 per week in 2016). He died on March 19, at age 56. films. Some of his undeveloped work was exhibited posthumously, and published by MoMA in the overview of his work Winogrand, Figments from the Real World (2003). Yet more from his largely unexamined archive of early and late work, plus well known photographs, were included in a retrospective touring exhibition beginning in 2013 and in the accompanying book Garry Winogrand (2013). All of Winogrand's wives and children attended a retrospective exhibit at the San Francisco Art Museum after his death. On display was a 1969 letter from Judith Teller, Winogrand's second wife: Szarkowski called Winogrand the central photographer of his generation. Critic Sean O'Hagan wrote in The Guardian in 2014 that in "the 1960s and 70s, he defined street photography as an attitude as well as a style – and it has laboured in his shadow ever since, so definitive are his photographs of New York"; ==Exhibitions==
Exhibitions
Solo exhibitions • 1969: The Animals, Museum of Modern Art, New York. • 1980: Galerie de Photographie, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Paris. • 1981: The Burton Gallery of Photographic Art, Toronto. • 1981: Light Gallery, New York. • 1983: Big Shots, Photographs of Celebrities, 1960–80, Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco. • 1984: Garry Winogrand: A Celebration, Light Gallery, New York. • 1984: Women are Beautiful, Zabriskie Gallery, New York. • 1988: Garry Winogrand, Museum of Modern Art. Retrospective. • 2001: ''Winogrand's Street Theater'', Rencontres d'Arles festival, Arles, France. • 2013/2014: Garry Winogrand, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, March–June 2013 and toured; National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., March–June 2014; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, June–September 2014; Galerie nationale du Jeu de Paume, Paris, October 2014 – February 2015. • 2019: Garry Winogrand: Color, Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY, May–December 2019. • 2024-25: Garry Winogrand: Man of the Crowd, the San Diego Museum of Art, San Diego, California, June 2024–January 2025. Group exhibitions • 1955: The Family of Man, The Museum of Modern Art, New York. • 1957: Seventy Photographers Look at New York, The Museum of Modern Art, New York. • 1963: ''Photography '63'', George Eastman House, Rochester, New York. • 1964: ''The Photographer's Eye'', Museum of Modern Art, New York. Curated by John Szarkowski. • 1966: Toward a Social Landscape, George Eastman House, Rochester, NY. Photographs by Winogrand, Bruce Davidson, Lee Friedlander, Danny Lyon, and Duane Michals. Curated by Nathan Lyons. • 1969: New Photography USA, Traveling exhibition prepared for the International Program of Museum of Modern Art, New York. • 1970: The Descriptive Tradition: Seven Photographers, Boston University, Massachusetts. • 1971: Seen in Passing, Latent Image Gallery, Houston. • 1975: 14 American Photographers, Baltimore Museum of Art, Maryland. • 1976: The Great American Rodeo, Fort Worth Art Museum, Texas. • 1978: Mirrors and Windows: American Photography since 1960, Museum of Modern Art, New York. • 1981: Garry Winogrand, Larry Clark and Arthur Tress, G. Ray Hawkins Gallery, Los Angeles. • 1981: Bruce Davidson and Garry Winogrand, Moderna Museet / Fotografiska, Stockholm, Sweden. • 1981: Central Park Photographs: Lee Friedlander, Tod Papageorge and Garry Winogrand, The Dairy in Central Park, New York, 1980. • 1983: Masters of the Street: Henri Cartier-Bresson, Josef Koudelka, Robert Frank and Garry Winogrand, University Gallery, University of Massachusetts Amherst. ==Collections==
Collections
Winogrand's work is held in the following public collections: • Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL • George Eastman Museum, Rochester, NY • Museum of Modern Art, New York • Whitney Museum of American Art, New York ==Awards==
Awards
• 1964, 1969, 1979: Guggenheim Fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation • 1975: Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts ==Publications==
Publications
Publications by WinograndThe Animals. New York, NY: Museum of Modern Art, 1969. . • Women are Beautiful. New York, NY: Light Gallery; New York, NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1975. . • Public Relations. New York, NY: Museum of Modern Art, 1977. . • Stock Photographs: The Fort Worth Fat Stock Show and Rodeo. Minnetonka, MN: Olympic Marketing Corp, 1980. . • Figments from the Real World. New York, NY: Museum of Modern Art, 1988. . A retrospective, published to accompany an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art and which travelled. Reproduces work from each of Winogrand's previous books, along with unpublished work, plus 25 images chosen from the work Winogrand left unedited at the time of his death. • New York, NY: Museum of Modern Art, 1990. . • New York, NY: Museum of Modern Art, 2003. . With addenda. • The Man in the Crowd: The Uneasy Streets of Garry Winogrand. San Francisco, CA: Fraenkel Gallery, 1998. . With an introduction by Fran Lebowitz and an essay by Ben Lifson. More than half of the images are previously unpublished. • El Juego de la Fotografía = The Game of Photography. Madrid: TF, 2001. . Text in English and Spanish. A retrospective. "Published to accompany an exhibition at Sala del Canal de Isabel II, Madrid, Nov.-Dec. 2001 and at three other institutions through June of 2002." • Winogrand 1964: Photographs from the Garry Winograd Archive, Center for Creative Photography, the University of Arizona. Santa Fe, NM: Arena, 2002. Edited by Trudy Wilner Stack. . • Arrivals & Departures: The Airport Pictures of Garry Winogrand. Edited by Alex Harris and Lee Friedlander and with texts by Alex Harris ('The Trip of our Lives') and Lee Friedlander ('The Hair of the Dog'). • New York: Distributed Art Publishers, 2003. . • New York: Distributed Art Publishers; Göttingen: Steidl, 2004. . • Garry Winogrand. • San Francisco, CA: San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2013. . Edited by Leo Rubinfien. Introduction by Rubinfien, Erin O'Toole and Sarah Greenough, and essays by Rubinfien ('Garry Winogrand's Republic'), Greenough ('The Mystery of the Visible: Garry Winogrand and Postwar American Photography'), Tod Papageorge ('In the City'), Sandra S. Phillips ('Considering Winogrand Now') and O'Toole ('How much Freedom can you Stand? Garry Winogrand and the Problem of Posthumous Editing'). • Paris: Jeu De Paume; Paris: Flammarion, 2014. . French-language version. • Madrid: Fundación Mapfre, 2015. . Spanish-language version. • Winogrand Color. Los Angeles: Twin Palms, 2023. Edited by Michael Almereyda and Susan Kismaric. . Publications paired with othersWinogrand / Lindbergh: Women. Cologne: Walther Konig, 2017. . Photographs from Women Are Beautiful (1975) by Winogrand and On Street by Peter Lindbergh, plus other color photographs by Winogrand. With a short essay by Joel Meyerowitz on Winogrand, and by Ralph Goetz on Lindbergh. Published on the occasion of the exhibition Peter Lindbergh / Garry Winogrand: Women on Street at Kulturzentrum NRW-Forum, Düsseldorf, 2017. Text in English and German. Contributions to publicationsLooking at Photographs: 100 Pictures from the Collection of The Museum of Modern Art. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1973. . By John Szarkowski. ==Films==
Films
Garry Winogrand: All Things Are Photographable (2018) – documentary feature by Sasha Waters Freyer ==References==
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