David T. Hanson | |
---|---|
Born | David Taverner Hanson January 28, 1948 Billings, Montana, U.S. |
Education | Rhode Island School of Design, Stanford University |
Known for | Photography, mixed-media, installations |
Awards | |
Website | www |
David Taverner Hanson (born January 28, 1948) is an American environmental photographer known for his striking images documenting the impact of human activities on the natural world. His large-format and aerial photographs, mixed-media works, and installations have focused on industrial and military sites. His work has been described as beautiful even though it shows the ravages of activities such as mining, toxic waste sites, industrial pollution, and deforestation. [1] [2] He has exhibited his photographs in many major museums such as the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, and his exhibitions have been widely reviewed.
Hanson was born on January 28, 1948, in Billings, Montana. He earned a BA in English from Stanford University in 1970 and a Master of Fine Arts in photography from Rhode Island School of Design in 1983. He was an adjunct professor at Rhode Island School of Design from 1983 to 2000. [3]
Hanson began to photograph as an undergraduate at Stanford, but he made a serious commitment to art when he took a nine-month private workshop from American photographer Minor White in 1973. He served on the art faculty at Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts from 1975 to 78. After spending a year photographing in France and Italy on a Camargo Foundation Fellowship, he worked as an assistant to Frederick Sommer. [4]
Initially he focused on naturalistic photographs of the landscape in the tradition of photographers such as Ansel Adams. But in 1982, while on leave from his graduate program, he had an artistic crisis: he realized that nature was changing, that it was being assaulted by industry. While driving to his parents' house in Billings, he came across Colstrip, Montana, a mining town in an area where the landscape had been ruined. He made that his subject, taking wide-angle and aerial photographs. [1]
His photographs of the coal strip mine, power plant, and factory town in Colstrip were subsequently exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1984 and 1986, [5] [6] bringing widespread attention to his work.
Since the late 1980s Hanson has worked with regional and national environmental organizations and legislators on mining reform, hazardous waste issues, and energy production and climate change. [1]
A mid-career survey of his work was published in 1997 by Aperture as Waste Land: Meditations on a Ravaged Landscape. [7] The sociologist Andrew Ross wrote, "Hanson's Waste Land series is a stunning documentary of a century of organized state terrorism against the North American land, its species, and its peoples." [1]
In 2016 Hanson published a retrospective volume of his work from 1982 to 1990, Wilderness to Wasteland, that was reviewed by Joyce Carol Oates in The New Yorker [2] and covered by Newsweek , [1] The Guardian , and other major media. [8]
Hanson's mixed-media installations have addressed North Carolina industries and endangered species, the Dugway Proving Ground in Utah, and U.S. nuclear tests. [9]
The art historian Suzi Gablik said of his artwork, "The history of Western industrial society's assault on the earth and the devastation it has wrought are the subjects of Hanson's aerial photographs. The images are harsh, distressing and terrible. . . . Hanson’s photographs of this ongoing drama are among the most powerful and disturbing images ever to be seen, perhaps because their eerie, abstract beauty almost seems to negate the sinister, hidden life which glimmers in them: landscape as Eros transformed into landscape as Thanatos." [10]
Hanson has received a number of awards for his work, including a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship in 1985 [11] and National Endowment for the Arts Visual Artist's Fellowships in 1986 [12] and 1994. [13] His artwork has been featured in numerous museum exhibitions, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, [14] the Whitney Museum of American Art, [15] the Art Institute of Chicago, [9] the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, [16] Aperture Foundation Burden Gallery, [9] National Museum of American Art, [9] Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art , [9] International Center of Photography, [17] and Harvard Art Museums. [18]
Colstrip is a city in Rosebud County, Montana, United States. The population was 2,096 at the 2020 census.
Sebastião Ribeiro Salgado Júnior is a Brazilian social documentary photographer and photojournalist.
Paul Strand was an American photographer and filmmaker who, along with fellow modernist photographers like Alfred Stieglitz and Edward Weston, helped establish photography as an art form in the 20th century. In 1936, he helped found the Photo League, a cooperative of photographers who banded together around a range of common social and creative causes. His diverse body of work, spanning six decades, covers numerous genres and subjects throughout the Americas, Europe, and Africa.
Sally Mann is an American photographer known for making large format black and white photographs of people and places in her immediate surroundings: her children, husband, and rural landscapes, as well as self-portraits.
Josef Koudelka is a Czech-French photographer. He is a member of Magnum Photos and has won awards such as the Prix Nadar (1978), a Grand Prix National de la Photographie (1989), a Grand Prix Henri Cartier-Bresson (1991), and the Hasselblad Foundation International Award in Photography (1992). Exhibitions of his work have been held at the Museum of Modern Art and the International Center of Photography, New York; the Hayward Gallery, London; the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam; and the Palais de Tokyo, Paris.
Robert Adams is an American photographer who has focused on the changing landscape of the American West. His work first came to prominence in the mid-1970s through his book The New West (1974) and his participation in the exhibition New Topographics: Photographs of a Man-Altered Landscape in 1975. He has received two Guggenheim Fellowships, a MacArthur Fellowship, the Deutsche Börse Photography Prize and the Hasselblad Award.
Joel Meyerowitz is an American street, portrait and landscape photographer. He began photographing in color in 1962 and was an early advocate of the use of color during a time when there was significant resistance to the idea of color photography as serious art. In the early 1970s he taught photography at the Cooper Union in New York City.
Stephen Shore is an American photographer known for his images of scenes and objects of the banal, and for his pioneering use of color in art photography. His books include Uncommon Places (1982) and American Surfaces (1999), photographs that he took on cross-country road trips in the 1970s.
Bruce Landon Davidson is an American photographer. He has been a member of the Magnum Photos agency since 1958. His photographs, notably those taken in Harlem, New York City, have been widely exhibited and published. He is known for photographing communities that are usually hostile to outsiders.
Jerome Liebling was an American photographer, filmmaker, and teacher. The documentary filmmaker Ken Burns, who studied with him at Hampshire College, called Liebling his mentor, and used one of Liebling's photographs on the cover of his 2022 book Our America: A Photographic History.
Ralph Gibson is an American art photographer best known for his photographic books. His images often incorporate fragments with erotic and mysterious undertones, building narrative meaning through contextualization and surreal juxtaposition.
Raghubir Singh (1942–1999) was an Indian photographer, most known for his landscapes and documentary-style photographs of the people of India. He was a self-taught photographer who worked in India and lived in Paris, London and New York. During his career he worked with National Geographic Magazine, The New York Times, The New Yorker and Time. In the early 1970s, he was one of the first photographers to reinvent the use of color at a time when color photography was still a marginal art form.
Dona Ann McAdams is an American photographer.
Jack Lueders-Booth is an American photographer. He retired from teaching at Harvard in 2000, and continues to live and work in the Boston area.
Mark Haworth-Booth is a British academic and historian of photography. He was a curator at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London from 1970 to 2004.
Reagan Louie is an American photographer and artist whose photography and installations explore cross-cultural identity and global transformation, in Asia and in Asian communities in the United States. His best-known works are Toward a Truer Life: Photographs of China 1980–1990 and Orientalia: Sex in Asia.
Bryan Schutmaat is an American photographer based in Texas, USA. Schutmaat book's include Grays the Mountain Sends (2013), which won the Aperture Foundation Portfolio Prize; Islands of the Blest (2014); Good Goddamn (2017) and County Road (2023). His work is held in the collections of Baltimore Museum of Art, Hood Museum of Art, Middlebury College Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.
Gail Skoff is a photographer known for her handcolored prints. Much of her work focuses on landscapes and food. She was a 1976 recipient of a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, and several of the prints resulting from fellowship are held by the Smithsonian American Art Museum. Her works are also held at the Biblioteque Nationale in Paris, the Center for Creative Photography in Tucson, and the Oakland Museum of California.
William Clift is an American photographer known for his black-and-white imagery of landscapes and of architectural subjects. Most of his work has been made in New Mexico, including Santa Fe where he has lived and worked since 1971, and of Mont Saint Michel in France, and St. Louis, MO.
Baldwin Lee is a Chinese-American photographer and educator known for his photographs of African-American communities in the Southern United States. He has had solo exhibitions at the Chrysler Museum of Art and the Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia, and received a Guggenheim Fellowship. His work is held in many private and public collections including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Yale University Art Gallery, and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC.