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Wednesday, November 19, 2025 |
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| Richard Misrach: Rewind spans five decades of work, from 'Cargo' to 'Telegraph 3 A.M.' |
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Richard Misrach, Self-Portrait, 1975. Gelatin silver print © Richard Misrach, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco.
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SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- With Richard Misrach: Rewind, Fraenkel Gallery presents a retrospective look at the artists career, spanning more than five decades. The exhibition is organized in advance of a full-scale survey of Misrach's work at museums in the
U.S. and Europe, planned for 2027 and 2028. Presented in reverse chronological order, the exhibition ranges from Cargo, Misrachs newest series exploring the impact of global trade, to Telegraph 3 A.M., his earliest project, documenting street culture in Berkeley, California in the early 1970s. Highlighting ideas and themes that have consistently driven his work, the exhibition presents photographs made with an array of materials and techniques. Using everything from 35mm film to large-scale digital prints, the show traces Misrachs development across the forefront of the medium. Fraenkel Gallery has shown Misrachs work since 1985; this is his seventeenth exhibition with the gallery.
Whether photographing subjects as disparate as environmental disasters or cloud studies, Misrach has always pursued beauty. Ive come to believe that beauty can be a very powerful conveyor of difficult ideas, says Misrach. It engages people when they might otherwise look away. The exhibition begins with a 2025 sunrise view of a freighter ship in the San Francisco Bay, printed at more than 5 x 6. Composed in vivid shades of pink, blue, and violet, the image from Cargo addresses the complex economic systems that shape modern life, and their far- reaching consequences. Other seductive but charged images document the U.S.-Mexico border wall, from the series Border Cantos; Louisiana's highly polluted Cancer Alley, from Petrochemical America; and the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, from a series shown here for the first time, 20 years after the storm. Several photographs come from Desert Cantos, Misrachs long-running series examining humans multifaceted relationship with the landscape of the American West.
Since the start of his career, Misrach has moved seamlessly between social concerns and more philosophical, experimental questions. My work
has been about navigating these two extremesthe political and the aesthetic,
Misrach writes. His first series Telegraph 3 A.M. used a medium format camera on a tripod. Working during the day and at night, Misrach made portraits recording the effects of drugs and poverty in the wake of the Berkeley counterculture movement. In the series that followed, Misrach began photographing in the desert, shooting at night but using a strobe to reveal the otherworldly shapes of cacti and sagebrush. The richly black, split-toned prints he made depict a near-mystical landscape visible only to the camera.
Later series push further into sublime encounters between nature and the camera. Starting in the 1990s, Misrach photographed the Golden Gate Bridge, capturing variations in atmosphere and color that border on abstraction. Working from a single vantage point, Misrach waited for the light and composition to align in front of his camera, an approach he returned to with On the Beach, his study of the oceans infinite surface, and most recently with Cargo. Abstraction in nature is also at the center of the series Notations, exploring the surreal hues found in color photographic negatives, digitally rendered. In these images, Misrach inverts the tonalities of clouds or desert scrub brush, creating delicate studies of texture and form.
Richard Misrach (born 1949) has been photographing the American West for more than 50 years. His work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; Art Institute of Chicago; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; and Centre Pompidou, Paris, among others. Border Cantos, a collaboration with the composer Guillermo Galindo, opened at the San Jose Museum of Art in California in 2016 and continues to travel throughout the U.S. His work has been featured in more than a dozen books, including Telegraph 3 A.M., Bravo 20: The Bombing of the American West, Crimes and Splendors: The Desert Cantos of Richard Misrach, On the Beach, Destroy This Memory, Petrochemical America, Border Cantos, Blind Spot Folios 001: Nancy Holt & Richard Misrach, On Landscape and Meaning, Notations, and most recently, Cargo. His photographs are held in the collections of major institutions including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, among others. He is the recipient of numerous awards including four National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships and a Guggenheim Fellowship.
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Today's News
November 19, 2025
Rebecca Rau Jewels Debuts THEN & NOW at NYC Jewelry Week, Where Ancient History Meets Modern Design
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White House Historical Association acquires Norman Rockwell masterpiece
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Major works by Michael Landy and Shaqúelle Whyte enter Walker Art Gallery collection
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Richard Misrach: Rewind spans five decades of work, from 'Cargo' to 'Telegraph 3 A.M.'
Kurt Cobain's 'Smells Like Teen Spirit' guitar to be offered at Christie's
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Pangolin London traces seven decades of figurative sculpture from Chadwick to the digital age
David Shrigley's 'Exhibition of Old Rope' turns 10 tons of discarded marine waste into million-pound art
'Family Forms' at the Tang: Rethinking the American family through art
MOCA announces 30th anniversary release of Catherine Opie's Dyke Deck
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William Blake's revolutionary 'The Tyger' print goes under the hammer at Christie's
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Jakob Ganslmeier & Ana Zibelnik win 2025 Camera Austria Award for Contemporary Photography
Weltkulturerbe Völklinger Hütte unveils 130 years of X-ray vision in art, science, and culture
$336,000 1908-S Double Eagle crowns Heritage's U.S. Coins Auction, driving total beyond $8.7 million
Peh Family Collection unveils exceptional high-denomination rarities at Heritage Auctions
Dawn Williams Boyd debuts powerful new series on race and power at Fort Gansevoort
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