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Louis Stettner

Manhattan Pastoral

Color Photography 1998-2014

October 18 – November 25, 2018

Louis Stettner Among Yellow Cabs, 2010

Louis Stettner
Among Yellow Cabs, 2010
Cibachrome
24.02 x 33.46 inches
(61 x 85 cm)

Louis Stettner, Untitled

Louis Stettner

Untitled

2006

Cibachrome

24 x 33 1/2 inches

 

Louis Stettner Worker Freize, 2006

Louis Stettner
Worker Freize, 2006
Cibachrome
24.02 x 33.46 inches
(61 x 85 cm)

Louis Stettner Untitled, 2003-2004

Louis Stettner
Untitled, 2003-2004
Cibachrome
15.75 x 19.69 inches
(40 x 50 cm)

Louis Stettner Untitled, 2005

Louis Stettner
Untitled, 2005
Cibachrome
19.69 x 15.75 inches
(50 x 40 cm)

Louis Stettner, Construction Site, 47th Street, Manhattan

Louis Stettner

Construction Site, 47th Street, Manhattan

2011

Cibachrome

24.02 x 33.46 inches
 

 

Louis Stettner Massage 9th Avenue, 2011

Louis Stettner
Massage 9th Avenue, 2011
Cibachrome
24.02 x 33.46 inches
(61 x 85 cm)

Louis Stettner Chrysler Building, 2004

Louis Stettner
Chrysler Building, 2004
Cibachrome
24.02 x 33.46 inches
(61 x 85 cm)

Louis Stettner Man Sleeping, Upper Westside, 2011

Louis Stettner
Man Sleeping, Upper Westside, 2011
Cibachrome
24.02 x 33.46 inches
(61 x 85 cm)

Louis Stettner Untitled, 2001

Louis Stettner
Untitled, 2001
Cibachrome
15.75 x 19.69 inches
(40 x 50 cm)

Louis Stettner Letter Writer, 2011

Louis Stettner
Letter Writer, 2011
Cibachrome
15.75 x 19.69 inches
(40 x 50 cm)

Louis Stettner Red Stairs, Times Square, 2005-2013

Louis Stettner
Red Stairs, Times Square, 2005-2013
Cibachrome
15.75 x 19.69 inches
(40 x 50 cm)

Louis Stettner Titan, Times Square, 2008

Louis Stettner
Titan, Times Square, 2008
Cibachrome
15.75 x 19.69 inches
(40 x 50 cm)

Louis Stettner Store Front Repair, 2006

Louis Stettner
Store Front Repair, 2006
Cibachrome
24.02 x 33.46 inches
(61 x 85 cm)

Louis Stettner Chairs, 9th Avenue, 2000

Louis Stettner
Chairs, 9th Avenue, 2000
Cibachrome
24.02 x 33.46 inches
(61 x 85 cm)

Louis Stettner, Construction Worker with a Crane

Louis Stettner

Construction Worker with a Crane

2008

Cibachrome

24 x 33 inches

 

Louis Stettner The Yawn, 2006

Louis Stettner
The Yawn, 2006
Cibachrome
24.02 x 33.46 inches
(61 x 85 cm)

Press Release

Tibor de Nagy is pleased to present Manhattan Pastoral, an exhibition of color photographs by Louis Stettner. This will be Stettner’s first exhibition at the gallery and first in New York since 2009.  Stettner was born in Brooklyn in 1922, he first traveled to Paris in the 1950s and spent decades thereafter traveling back and forth between Paris and New York, cities he called his “two loves.”  He died in Saint-Ouen, France, in 2016.

For our inaugural exhibition of Louis Stettner, we are presenting Manhattan Pastoral, color photography shot in New York from 1998 to 2014.  Stettner only took up color photography, along with painting, in the early 1990’s. He was particularly drawn to the Cibachrome process for its rich colors.  The works in the exhibition were all shot on his annual summer visits to New York City, mostly in and around Times Square.  When in New York, Stettner began each day walking the streets.  He called this series Manhattan Pastoral because he sought out the less gentrified parts of Times Square, west of Ninth Avenue, where he could still find regular New Yorkers against the backdrop of the city’s architecture, both vernacular and iconic, and in an ever process of change.

From the beginning of his career as a photographer, Stettner was drawn to everyday people and he particularly pursued the subject of people at work.  He did this as a point of view and as a political act. Conversely and as a counterpoint, he also often portrayed people at rest, or on their commute home – as in the Penn Station series from 1958 and his initial Subway photographs from 1946.  Stettner honed his vision from two traditions, American “street photography” and the French tradition of humanist photography.  When, later in life, he turned to color photography, much of his format and mission remained.

Louis Stettner had an over seven decade career.  He acquired his first camera, a wooden view camera, as a teenager. In the late 1930s he joined the Photo League, a group of socially conscious photographers, where he met and befriended Weegee. Stettner served as a combat photographer in the Pacific during WWII. Shortly after the war, he traveled to Paris for a trip that turned into a five year stay. In Paris, he studied photography at the Institute for Advanced Cinematic Studies and became a close friend of Brassaï, and was deeply influenced by him as well as other French photographers, with their poetic and romantic style of portraying everyday life.

In 2016 Stettner was treated to a retrospective at the Centre Pompidou, Paris; the exhibition Ici et Ailleurs was co-curated by Clément Chéroux and Julie Jones.  The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art will open a solo exhibition of Louis Stettner on October 27th.  Titled Traveling Light, the exhibition will present an overview of Stettner's most important series works. It is curated by Mr. Chéroux, now the Senior Curator Photography at SFMoma, and will remain on view until May 27, 2019.

Louis Stettner's work is in numerous museum collections including The Museum of Modern Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Art Institute of Chicago, and Los Angeles County Museum of Art. In 2017, the Whitney Museum of American Art added five additional Stettner photographs to its collection.