New book celebrates Lee Friedlander's wry, poignant take on Christmas in the USA
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New book celebrates Lee Friedlander's wry, poignant take on Christmas in the USA
With a healthy sprinkle of plastic and tinsel, Friedlander's visions of a commercial, uniquely American Christmas evoke both irony and nostalgia



NEW YORK, NY.- Whether or not you celebrated Christmas at some point during the last 70 years, you have no doubt encountered many of the scenes shown here in Lee Friedlander's eclectic black-and-white documentation of the holiday season across America. From city sidewalks to cookie-cutter suburbs, Friedlander captures it all: main street store window displays; plastic nativities on snow-covered lawns; inflatable snowglobes and Santa Clauses; questionable St. Nicholas–themed lingerie; oversize or underwhelming Christmas trees; and houses so covered in string lights as to demand nothing short of a miracle from the local power grid.

As in all of his work, Friedlander's images of Christmas reflect his own version of the holiday. Is Christmas in America a religious celebration? A commercial precept? A misunderstanding? An indulgent blasphemy? Or all of the above? The only certain thing is that December 25 has provided an opportunity for the people's photographer to hold up a mirror to a flawed, inventive, preoccupied and wonderful society.

Lee Friedlander, b. 1934, Aberdeen, Washington, lives and works in New City, New York.

Lee Friedlander began photographing the American social landscape in 1948. With an ability to organize a vast amount of visual information in dynamic compositions, Friedlander has made humorous and poignant images among the chaos of city life or in dense natural landscapes, focusing on countless subjects ranging from cars and trees to monuments and nudes. Fraenkel Gallery began showing Friedlander’s work in 1979, the year the gallery opened, and has presented close to 20 solo exhibitions since then.

Many of the photographs from early in his career focus on the street, where he found evidence of the complexity of the American social landscape in sly compositions that record people, buildings, advertisements, and reflections. Friedlander is recognized for a group of self-portraits he began in the 1960s, published in a monograph by Fraenkel Gallery in 2000. His 1960s series The Little Screens shows television screens in motel rooms and other anonymous spaces, pairing disquieting, glowing TV images with their mid-century surroundings. From the 1950s to the 1970s, while continuing his work on the street, Friedlander recorded jazz, country, and blues performers, making images that often appeared on album covers, and were collected in the 1998 publication American Musicians. In the 1970s Friedlander produced The American Monument, a series depicting statues and monuments around the country. Framed to emphasize an ironic or surprising relationship between the markers and their surroundings, the series complicates the notion of commemoration during the decade of America’s bicentennial.

Included among the many monographs designed and published by Friedlander himself are Sticks and Stones, Lee Friedlander: Photographs, Letters From the People, Apples and Olives, Cherry Blossom Time in Japan, Family, and At Work. Starting in 2017, the artist and Yale University Press released an ambitious six-book suite collectively titled The Human Clay—a sweeping collection of street and environmental portraits culled and edited by Friedlander from his extensive archive, many not previously published. Recent projects, such as Signs, Chain Link, Dog’s Best Friend, and Lee Friedlander Framed by Joel Coen have continued the focus on revisiting Friedlander’s 60+ year archive, finding new connections and themes that have run throughout his career.

Friedlander’s work was included in the highly influential 1967 New Documents exhibition, curated by John Szarkowski at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. In 2005, Friedlander was the recipient of the prestigious Hasselblad Award as well as the subject of a major traveling retrospective and catalogue organized by the Museum of Modern Art. In 2010, the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, exhibited the entirety of his body of work, America by Car. In 2017, Yale University Art Gallery exhibited and published some of his earliest work, photographs of participants in the 1957 Prayer Pilgrimage for Freedom in Washington, D.C. In 2020, Fundación MAPFRE in Madrid organized a major retrospective, which traveled to Barcelona, Berlin, and other cities. His work is held by major collections including the Art Institute of Chicago; George Eastman Museum, Rochester, New York; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Modern Art, New York; National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, among many others.

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