Friday, July 8, 2022

Joel Sternfeld - "you take 35 degrees out of 360 degrees"

Joel Sternfeld
A Male Pistachio Tree in Bloom,
Village Homes, Davis, California

2005
C-print
Art Institute of Chicago

Joel Sternfeld
Arcadia Cohousing, Carrboro, North Carolina
2005
C-print
Art Institute of Chicago

Joel Sternfeld
Liz Christy Garden,
Bowery and Houston Streets, New York City

2005
C-print
Art Institute of Chicago

Joel Sternfeld
Bed and Breakfast, Wiscoy, New York
1996
C-print
Art Institute of Chicago

Joel Sternfeld
Eagle Art Works Foundry,
6700 Southwest Avenue, St Louis, Missouri

1994
C-print
Art Institute of Chicago

Joel Sternfeld
The General Sherman Tree,
Sequoia National Park, California

1994
C-print
Art Institute of Chicago

Joel Sternfeld
Central Park looking toward the Plaza Hotel, New York
1994
C-print
Art Institute of Chicago

Joel Sternfeld
Central Park, north of the Obelisk
behind the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

1993
C-print
Art Institute of Chicago

Joel Sternfeld
Abandoned Farmhouse,
Via Appia Pignatelli, Quarto Miglio, Rome

1990
C-prints
Art Institute of Chicago

Joel Sternfeld
A View of the Water Channel of the Claudian Aqueduct
and the Anio Novus Aqueduct piggybacked on top, near Cinecittà, Rome

1990
C-prints
Art Institute of Chicago

Joel Sternfeld
Brick reinforcing Arches of the Claudian Aqueduct, near Cinecittà, Rome
1990
C-prints
Art Institute of Chicago

Joel Sternfeld
Grand Nymphaeum of the Villa dei Gordiani,
Parco dei Gordiani, Rome

1990
C-print
Art Institute of Chicago

Joel Sternfeld
Women at their Daily Gathering beside an Ancient Roman Wall,
Parco dei Gordiani, Rome

1990
C-print
Art Institute of Chicago

Joel Sternfeld
Via Columella in Quadraro,
a seventeenth-century village in the Roman countryside

1989
C-print
Art Institute of Chicago

Joel Sternfeld
McLean, Virginia
1978
C-print
Art Institute of Chicago

"You take 35 degrees out of 360 degrees and call it a photo," he told the Guardian in a 2004 interview. "No individual photo explains anything."