Details
Listen to the podcast
John Gossage's The Pond was considered groundbreaking when first published in 1985, and remains one of the most important photobooks of the medium. Consisting of photographs taken around and away from a pond situated in an unkempt wooded area at the edge of a city, the volume presents a considered foil to Henry Thoreau's stay at Walden. The photographs in The Pond do not aspire to the "beauty" of classical landscapes in the tradition of Ansel Adams. Instead, they reveal a subtle vision of reality on the border between humankind and nature. Gossage depicts nature in full splendor, yet at odds with both itself and humankind, but his tone is ambiguous and evocative rather than didactic. Robert Adams described the work as "believable because it includes evidence of man's darkness of spirit, memorable because of the intense fondness [Gossage] shows for the remains of the natural world." Aperture is pleased to reissue this exquisitely produced classic monograph, not surprisingly a highly sought-after collectable, with the addition of three images and two essays, and a new dust jacket inspired by the original design. This second, twenty-fifth anniversary edition offers new audiences the opportunity to celebrate this notable work by a master photographer and bookmaker. The book is accompanied by an exhibition of the same title opening at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C. on August 27, 2010. John Gossage (born in New York, 1946) is well known for his artistÕs books and photographic publications, and has produced seventeen books and boxes on specific bodies of work. His work has been exhibited worldwide. His photographs are held in numerous private and public collections, including those of the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington D.C., and Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gossage lives in Washington, D.C. Gerry Badger (essay) has been a photography critic for nearly thirty years. His books include The Photobook: A History, Volumes I and II (coauthored with Martin Parr), and The Genius of Photography: How Photography Has Changed Our Lives. The Pleasures of Good Photographs, his collection of essays, was recently published by Aperture. Toby Jurovics (essay), curator of photography at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C., since 2006, is a specialist in landscape photography ranging from the Civil War era to the present. |
