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Laurence
Miller Gallery is pleased to present Bruce Wrighton:Through
an Open Window, the first comprehensive overview of Wrighton’s important yet
relatively unknown career as
a documentary photographer. This exhibition features fifty color
photographs selected from three projects made in the mid-1980’s with
an 8 x 10” camera in the vicinity of his home in Binghamton, New York:
Street Portraits, Dinosaurs and Dreamboats, and St. George and the
Dragon
Street
portraits is a powerful yet tender series that places Wrighton in the
tradition of Eugene Atget, Lewis Hine, and August Sander. It
focuses on individuals and couples who were very much part of the
working class, many of whom lived outside the mainstream of society.
Carnival workers, a parking lot attendant, a security guard, were among
the over 75 people that willingly agreed to pose as he composed their
portraits with his cumbersome 8 x 10” camera. Each of them gave
something of him or herself to Wrighton, who recorded their often
bruised faces and tattered clothing with affection and respect.
Dinosaurs and Dreamboats celebrates the classic American cars of the
1950’s, juxtaposed with the older architecture of Binghamton. More than simply portraits of beautiful cars, these photographs
transport the viewer back in time to an era when America
was optimistic, upbeat, and full of swagger. We see a lushly
painted red and white ’58 DeSoto Firedome and a blue ’59 Ford
Skyliner, among others.
St.George and the Dragon represents an investigation into the power of
images and icons, both secular and sacred, that Wrighton discovered
around Binghamton in taverns, churches, and homes. Whether it is a
glowing Wurlitzer jukebox under a floating Christ figure from a church
basement, or a bucolic lake scene with a fisherman in a boat, painted on
an old barroom wall, Wrighton sought to better understand the power of
icons and images and how they make us focus and transcend our everyday
experiences.
Bruce Wrighton lived and worked in Binghamton,
New York
until his death in 1988 at the age of 38.
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