| The American Monument Lee Freidlander |
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All doctrines, all politics and civilization, exurge from you, All sculpture and monuments, and anything inscribed anywhere, are tallied in you, The gist of histories and statistics as far back as the records reach, is in you this hour, and myths and tales the same, If you were not breathing and walking here, where would they all be? Walt Whitman
I am still astonished and heartened by the deep
affection in those pictures, by the photographers tolerant equanimity
in the face of the facts, by the generosity of sprit, the freedom from
pomposity and rhetoric. One might call this work an act of high artistic
patriotism, an achievement that might help us reclaim that work from ideologues
and expediters. His work, in sum, constitutes a conversation
among the symbols that we live among and that to some degree we live by.
It reminds us of the strength of an alternative American tradition to
that of Thoreau and Whitman and Stieglitz, with its constant insistence
on the big I. His work recalls Thomas Eakins, the painter; and Walker
Evans, the photographer; and Wallace Stevens, who said, It is important
to believe that the visible is the equivalent of the invisible....
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Father Duffy. Times Square, New York, New York
In Memory of Tom Mix. Near Florence, Arizona
General George Rogers Clark. Louisville, Kentucky
To Michigan Soldiers and Sailors. Campus Martius, Detroit, Michigan |