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Aaron Siskind: Abstract Expressionist of Photography


Article # : 13399 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 9 / 1987  1,887 Words
Author : Lloyd Eby
Lloyd Eby has worked in film and video since 1970 and has published articles on the interaction of film and religion. With René Berger, he coedited the book Art and Technology (New York: Paragon House Publishers, 1986). He is assistant senior editor in the Currents in Modern Thought section of The World & I.

       Aaron Siskind is sometimes called the father of modern photography. His work, more than that of any other single photographer, has freed photography from its concerns with simple representation, documentation, and portraiture and has taken it into the realm of poetic metaphor. In Siskind's hands, photography attained its potential as a fully abstract and expressionistic art form. After developing a taste for Siskind's work, one may find other photography predictable, even trivial.
       
        Long a leading teacher of photography, Siskind began his career by teaching one day a week at the Trenton Junior College in New Jersey in 1949. From 1951 to 1971, he taught at Chicago's Institute of Design and for the next five years at the Rhode Island School of Design. At both schools, Siskind worked closely with Harry Callahan, also a leading photographer and teacher.
       
        An extremely active and interested teacher, Siskind always managed projects and events and constantly involved himself in his students' projects. One such project was a photographic study of architecture that eventually led to a major project about architect Louis Sullivan's work. Yet Siskind never imposed his style or taste on his students; he welcomed diversity as long as the student's work showed a concern with aesthetics. Central to his teaching was what constituted a photograph, how to produce it economically, and how to critique the resulting picture.
       
        Working-Class Origins
       
        Born on December 4, 1903, in New York City to Russian Jewish immigrants, Siskind grew up, as he puts it, in a house ... (2000 of 10838 Characters)
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