Stephen Shore made a name for himself shooting classic Americana mundanity in the 70s, evolving his work from automatic cameras to large-format cameras, using both color and black and white, and ...
The Museum of Modern Art has a long history with photographer Stephen Shore. The institution first purchased his work in the early 1970s, when a then 14-year-old Shore boldly set up a meeting with ...
Stephen Shore’s remarkable career started early. Born in New York in 1947, he was given his first photography set at six. When he was 14, the trailblazing fashion photographer Edward Steichen – then a ...
Each month in this ongoing series, a photographer offers a preview of a previously unexhibited body of work. At the age of twenty-five, Stephen Shore set off by car from his native Manhattan and ...
Stephen Shore has been my favorite living photographer since I took my first photograph. Currently, he is the subject of a major retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art that features his work over ...
Ever since his unofficial apprenticeship at Andy Warhol’s Factory in the mid-1960s, Stephen Shore’s career has been defined by his constant search for new photographic questions to answer. In the ...
Stephen Shore’s photographs in July 2020 look like they did this time last year—or, really, at any other point in his 50-year career. They don’t scream quarantine. You won’t find any pictures of masks ...
New York photographer Stephen Shore is known for some of the most iconic images in contemporary photography that capture peak Americana—from restaurant table tops to serene landscapes. Despite the ...
In June 1972, Stephen Shore picked up a Rollei 35mm camera and photographed a half-eaten slice of chocolate cake on a table with dirty plates, a cup of coffee, the handwritten check, and two dollar ...
“Having a retrospective at MoMA—for a contemporary artist, it’s really a dream come true,” Shore says. The show is arguably the most significant exhibition of the artist’s work since 1971, when, at ...
Shore’s new book, “Early Work,” hints at the towering figure he would become in photography, a master of elegantly prosaic scenes. By Arthur Lubow Antoni Porowski, Rachel Kushner, Michelle Zauner and ...
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