Greta Pratt

Last updated

Greta Pratt
NationalityAmerican
Known forPhotography

Greta Pratt is an American photographer whose primary interests are American identity, history and myth. She is the author of four books of photographs, Using History (Steidl, 2005) and In Search of the Corn Queen (Smithsonian American Art Museum, 1994) The Wavers (Blue Sky Books 2014) and Nineteen Lincolns (Peanut Press 2020). Pratt's work is represented in major public and private collections, including the Smithsonian American Art Museum: Smithsonian Institution, The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Museum of Contemporary Photography, Portland (Oregon) Art Museum, and Minneapolis Institute of Art. Pratt served as photography bureau chief of Reuters International in New York City. Her photographs have been featured in Art in America, The New York Times Magazine and The New Yorker. [1]

Contents

Career

Pratt has made a practice of documenting staged American history. [2] Her series Nineteen Lincolns features members of the Association of Lincoln Presenters, a membership organization for Abraham Lincoln impersonators. [3] It is intended to celebrate one of the most iconic elements of the bedrock of American history and put a quirky modern twist on it. [4] Nineteen Lincolns has been on view in solo and group shows across the country since 2007. [5] Her book Using History is an accurate depiction of her photographic universe, which is the intersection where American past meets American present. Pratt often uses clever juxtapositions of photos to tell her tale of how Americans incorporate their country's past to explain their attitudes to the present. [6]

Author Howard Zinn (People's History of the United States) says of Pratt's Using History, "Greta Pratt's extraordinary photographs give us glimpses of people and places that stimulate us to think about our history, not only of the great American West, but of the nation itself. Her point of view is delightfully antic and provocative. We want not only to enjoy the moment of our viewing, but also to study and ponder each photograph, challenged to find its larger meaning." [7]

Pratt's work has a clear connection with that of Martin Parr, both using hyper-saturated color to slyly capture the peculiarities of how everyday people represent themselves and their roots. [8]

In 2024, Pratt received a Guggenheim Fellowship.

Education

Pratt received her BFA in photography from the University of Minnesota and her MFA in from the State University of New York at New Paltz.

Books

Quotes about Pratt's work

“…Everyone is trying to connect to the past but the past is always fiction. How history is told reveals much more about the people and time period that are telling it than about history itself.” [9] “This book is a collection of photographs about history perceived, about how we look at ourselves and others, about how we recreate and reaffirm the American experience, about how we continue to live with, to rationalize, and to atone for the lingering spirit of place….Pratt's photographs help create an understanding of a special form of vernacular storytelling, of acting out and dressing up the past. History as we remember it emerges from her photographs. Perhaps it could more correctly be labeled history as we want it to be remembered or, even better, as we re-create and relive it. As the American novelist Willa Cather reminds us, "Memory is better than reality." [10] “What Pratt catches here is not merely anachronism or irony…What you see here is the attempt by ordinary people – nonhistorians, that is – to capture history in a form that makes it locally communally tangible – history as shared terrain…There is an idea in most of these faces, though. The idea is continuity with forebears, with first principles, with a larger conception of the time horizon than everyday life usually affords." [11]

Related Research Articles

Robert Frank was a Swiss American photographer and documentary filmmaker. His most notable work, the 1958 book titled The Americans, earned Frank comparisons to a modern-day de Tocqueville for his fresh and nuanced outsider's view of American society. Critic Sean O'Hagan, writing in The Guardian in 2014, said The Americans "changed the nature of photography, what it could say and how it could say it. [ ... ] it remains perhaps the most influential photography book of the 20th century." Frank later expanded into film and video and experimented with manipulating photographs and photomontage.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Berenice Abbott</span> American photographer (1898–1991)

Berenice Alice Abbott was an American photographer best known for her portraits of cultural figures of the interwar period, New York City photographs of architecture and urban design of the 1930s, and science interpretation of the 1940s to the 1960s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gordon Parks</span> American photographer, musician, writer and film director (1912–2006)

Gordon Roger Alexander Buchanan Parks was an American photographer, composer, author, poet, and film director, who became prominent in U.S. documentary photojournalism in the 1940s through 1970s—particularly in issues of civil rights, poverty and African Americans—and in glamour photography. He is best remembered for his iconic photos of poor Americans during the 1940s, for his photographic essays for Life magazine, and as the director of the films Shaft, Shaft's Big Score and the semiautobiographical The Learning Tree.

William Eggleston is an American photographer. He is widely credited with increasing recognition of color photography as a legitimate artistic medium. Eggleston's books include William Eggleston's Guide (1976) and The Democratic Forest (1989).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Juergen Teller</span> German fine-art and fashion photographer (born 1964)

Juergen Teller is a German fine-art and fashion photographer. He was awarded the Citibank Prize for Photography in 2003 and received the Special Presentation International Center of Photography Infinity Award in 2018.

Frank Gohlke is an American landscape photographer. He has been awarded two Guggenheim fellowships, two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, and a Fulbright Scholar Grant. His work is included in numerous permanent collections, including those of Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Metropolitan Museum of Art; and the Art Institute of Chicago.

Tina Barney is an American photographer best known for her large-scale, color portraits of her family and close friends in New York and New England. She is a member of the Lehman family.

Joel Sternfeld is an American fine-art photographer and educator. He is best known for his large-format color pictures of contemporary American life and identity. His work contributed to the establishment of color photography as a respected artistic medium. Sternfeld documents people and places, furthering the tradition of roadside photography started by Walker Evans in the 1930s.

John Gossage is an American photographer, noted for his artist's books and other publications using his photographs to explore under-recognised elements of the urban environment such as abandoned tracts of land, debris and garbage, and graffiti, and themes of surveillance, memory and the relationship between architecture and power.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Henry Wessel Jr.</span> American photographer and educator (1942–2018)

Henry Wessel was an American photographer and educator. He made "obdurately spare and often wry black-and-white pictures of vernacular scenes in the American West".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bruce Davidson (photographer)</span> American photographer

Bruce Landon Davidson is an American photographer, who 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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alec Soth</span> American photographer

Alec Soth is an American photographer, based in Minneapolis. Soth makes "large-scale American projects" featuring the midwestern United States. New York Times art critic Hilarie M. Sheets wrote that he has made a "photographic career out of finding chemistry with strangers" and photographs "loners and dreamers". His work tends to focus on the "off-beat, hauntingly banal images of modern America" according to The Guardian art critic Hannah Booth. He is a member of Magnum Photos.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Edward Burtynsky</span> Canadian photographer and artist

Edward Burtynsky is a Canadian photographer and artist known for his large format photographs of industrial landscapes. His works depict locations from around the world that represent the increasing development of industrialization and its impacts on nature and the human existence. It is most often connected to the philosophical concept of the sublime, a trait established by the grand scale of the work he creates, though they are equally disturbing in the way they reveal the context of rapid industrialization.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mitch Epstein</span> American photographer (born 1952)

Mitchell Epstein is an American photographer. His books include Vietnam: A Book of Changes (1997); Family Business (2003), which won the 2004 Kraszna-Krausz Photography Book Award; Recreation: American Photographs 1973–1988 (2005); Mitch Epstein: Work (2006); American Power (2009); Berlin (2011); New York Arbor (2013); Rocks and Clouds (2018); Sunshine Hotel (2019); In India (2021); and Property Rights (2021).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tod Papageorge</span> American photographer

Tod Papageorge is an American photographer whose career began in the New York City street photography movement of the 1960s. He is the recipient of two Guggenheim fellowships and two NEA Visual Artists Fellowships. His work is in public collections including the Museum of Modern Art and the Art Institute of Chicago. Between 1979 and 2013 he directed the graduate program in photography at the Yale School of Art.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Saul Leiter</span> American photographer and painter (1923–2013)

Saul Leiter was an American photographer and painter whose early work in the 1940s and 1950s was an important contribution to what came to be recognized as the New York school of photography.

Collier Schorr is an American artist and fashion photographer best known for adolescent portraits that blend photographic realism with elements of fiction and youthful fantasy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John P. Jacob</span> American curator (born 1957)

John P. Jacob is an American curator. He grew up in Italy and Venezuela, graduated from the Collegiate School (1975) in New York City, and studied at the University of Chicago before earning a BA in human ecology from the College of the Atlantic (1981) and an MA in art history from Indiana University (1994).

Philip Trager is an American art photographer, known principally for his photographs of architecture and of modern dance. As of 2015, 11 monographs of his photography have been published by houses such as New York Graphic Society; Little, Brown; Wesleyan University Press; and Steidl.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Association of Lincoln Presenters</span> Organization for Abraham Lincoln impersonators

The Association of Lincoln Presenters is a membership organization founded by Dan Bassuk in 1990. It was established as a members' society for impersonators of 16th president of the United States, Abraham Lincoln. The group has been the subject of a feature-length documentary and a photography exhibition by Greta Pratt.

References

  1. "Greta Pratt: Using History | Museum of Contemporary Photography". Mocp.org. October 14, 2006. Archived from the original on April 25, 2015. Retrieved December 8, 2013.
  2. John Leland (October 22, 2012). "Looking Like Lincoln". The New York Times . Retrieved December 8, 2013.
  3. Wogan, Hicks. "Abes Across America". National Geographic . Vol. 241, no. 4 (April 2022 ed.). pp. 6–12.
  4. Coppelman, Alyssa (November 9, 2012). "Abraham Lincoln impersonators pose for photographer Greta Pratt (PHOTOS)". Slate. Retrieved December 8, 2013.
  5. "CV". Greta Pratt. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved December 8, 2013.
  6. "Yahoo Groups". Yahoo!. Archived from the original on December 8, 2013. Retrieved December 8, 2013.
  7. Greta Pratt. "Greta Pratt: Using History by Greta Pratt — Reviews, Discussion, Bookclubs, Lists". Goodreads.com. Retrieved December 8, 2013.
  8. "Greta Pratt at Mass MoCA and Atlanta Contemporary – 2point8".
  9. "Greta Pratt: Taking Liberties " Candela Books + Gallery – Copyright 2012". Candelabooks.com. Retrieved December 8, 2013.
  10. Strickland, Rennard (2005). Using History, Public History, Vernacular Storytelling, and the Search for Self (Gottingen, Germany: Steidl.) ISBN   3865211291.
  11. Klinkenborg, Verlyn, History Matters, Mother Jones, Sept. 1999