Garry Winogrand, born in 1928 in New York City, was a pivotal American street photographer known for his candid snapshots that captured the essence of American life in the mid-20th century. Often ...
“Garry Winogrand: All Things Are Photographable” gives the prolific street photographer — a label he disdained but could never shake — the “American Masters” treatment. Informative but not ...
A centenary exhibition of Saul Leiter’s photos reveals his painterly way with Kodachrome. And a new book suggests that Garry Winogrand worked best in black-and-white. By Arthur Lubow When Saul Leiter ...
When people talk about a “street photographer,” they mean someone like Garry Winogrand. A native of the Bronx, Winogrand (1928–1984) shot on Fifth Avenue in Midtown Manhattan, he shot on the wide ...
Jeffrey Fraenkel tells a revealing story about Garry Winogrand and the world he photographed. In the early 1980s, Fraenkel and Winogrand walked out of Fraenkel’s San Francisco photography gallery and ...
A fascinating documentary celebrates the Bronx-born artist who caught more swirling life in his images that arguably any other photographer. A documentary about an artist or photographer should feel ...
If Garry Winogrand has been criticized for being indiscriminate, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art’s new exhibition of his work proves the reverse. At the very least, Winogrand was consistent in ...
"Garry Winogrand is organized by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the National Gallery of Art, Washington." Catalog of an exhibition held at San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, March 9-June ...
In 1964, photographer Garry Winogrand went off on a cross-country trip funded by a Guggenheim grant and took lots of pictures along the way. That's exactly what you would expect from a photographer, ...
Geoff Dyer writes books that are easy to enjoy but hard to pin down. Early on in his new volume about the photography of Garry Winogrand, he offers a characteristic bit of self-reflection. “In my ...