Laurence Miller Gallery Exhibition                                                                                  April 3 - May 31, 2008

 Fred Herzog Vancouver Color


From April 3 - May 31, 2008, Laurence Miller Gallery will present the color photographs of Canadian Fred Herzog.  Herzog’s work is best described as a time capsule or treasure trove. This will be his first US one-person exhibition. Perfectly composed and atmospheric, the people and places that Herzog captured in the 1950’s and 1960’s, remind us of a period of transition, hope and a move toward the modern era. 

His images, mostly taken in Vancouver, are studies that show the aestheticism of life, presented with ease yet filled with the complexity of a perfectionist’s eye. A family gazes through a window in Chinatown , as the fashionable mother delicately holds her cigarette.  The city is awash in the vibrant color of glowing neon, that sometimes reflects off of the rain-soaked streets.  The displays and windows of second-hand shops are remarkable still-life’s that reflect not only the time, but also the shop-owners artful and loving presentation of goods for sale.  It is the people, the signs and billboards, and of course nostalgia for a time that has since drastically changed, that pulls us in and doesn’t let go.

Herzog immigrated to Canada from Germany following World War II. While employed as a medical photographer in Vancouver, his passion for photography took him on evenings and weekends to the streets to document daily life.  It was there he captured the subtle human gestures of everyday people, savoring every moment in perfect light. The unique public space that he so carefully cataloged with glimmering lights and psychedelic neon has since been replaced by big-name retailers and cookie-cutter storefronts.

Herzog’s work has been rapidly gaining attention after decades of virtual obscurity. Working in the 1950’s & 1960’s with color slides at a time dominated by black and white, his work was primarily shown locally as a slide show presentation. His first major exhibition was a retrospective of approximately 140 images in 2007 at the Vancouver Art Gallery . It is only now that this prolific body of work (over 80,000 Kodachrome slides) has begun to be printed in the way that the 78 year-old artist had envisioned it so long ago.

There will be a reception with the artist on April 3rd from 6-8 p.m. His book Fred Herzog: Vancouver Photographs, which was published in conjunction with his retrospective, will be available.


  (click image for detail view)

Herzog_Bogners.jpg (80959 bytes)

Bogner's Grocery, 1960
30 x 20" inkjet print, edition 20

 

 

 

Herzog_BooksMain.jpg (74374 bytes)

Bookshop, Main Street, 1963
20 x 30" inkjet print, edition 20

 

 


Herzog_EisieDick.jpg (56872 bytes)

Eisie & Dick, 1974
20 x 30" inkjet print, edition 20

Herzog_Hub&Lux.jpg (56208 bytes)

Hub & Lux, 1958
20 x 30" inkjet print, edition 20

 

 

 

Herzog_Family.jpg (49935 bytes)

Family, 1967

20 x 30" inkjet print, edition 20

 

 

 

Herzog_MagazineMan.jpg (72627 bytes)

Magazine Man, 1959
20 x 30" inkjet print, edition 20

 

 

Herzog_MainStBarber.jpg (57668 bytes)

Main Barber, 1968
20 x 30" inkjet print, edition 20

 

 

 

Herzog_Maritime.jpg (76477 bytes)

Maritime Mural, 1960
20 x 30" inkjet print, edition 20

 

 


Herzog_URNext.jpg (71507 bytes)

UR Next, 1959
20 x 30" inkjet print, edition 20

Herzog_WhiteLunch.jpg (63709 bytes)

White Lunch, 1959

30 x 20" inkjet print, edition 20

 

 

 

Herzog_Granville.jpg (38871 bytes)

Flaneur, Granville, 1959

30 x 20" inkjet print, edition 20

 

 

 

Herzog_CrossingPowell.jpg (43630 bytes)

Crossing Powell, 1984
30 x 20" inkjet print, edition 20

 

 

Herzog_RobsonSt.jpg (72508 bytes)

Robson Street, 1957
30 x 20" inkjet print, edition 20

 

 

 

Herzog_ThreeTheatres.jpg (65029 bytes)

Three Theaters, 1957

30 x 20" inkjet print, edition 20

 


 

Herzog_Bookshop.jpg (139558 bytes)

Bookshop, Main Street, 1963
30 x 20" inkjet print, edition 20

 

 

Herzog_RoomHarwood.jpg (70957 bytes)

My Room, Harwood Street, 1958
30 x 20" inkjet print, edition 20

 

 


 

 

 



 

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