Join Our Mailing List:
Email Address: 
Name: 

International

<< Return to the album index page

Click on a thumbnail to view a larger image. Click anywhere on the larger image or use the 'Esc' (escape) key to close it. Use the 'next' and 'previous' links or the '<' or '>' (more than/less than keys) to navigate the larger images.

Richard Renaldi (USA)

Biography:
Richard Renaldi was born in Chicago, IL, and received his BFA in photography from New York University. Solo exhibitions of his photographs have been mounted in galleries and museums throughout the United States since 2002, including solo exhibitions at Yossi Milo Gallery and Debs & Co in New York, and at Jackson Fine Art in Atlanta. Renaldi’s work has been exhibited in numerous group shows, including Strangers: The First ICP (International Center of Photography) Triennial of Photography and Video (2003). Figure and Ground , his first monograph, was published by Aperture Books in 2006.

About the artist:
Richard Renaldi is a photographer in love with looking. His trust in the descriptive and empathic ability of the camera verges on that of his nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century predecessors. Can we gain insight into the person in front of us simply by staring fixedly into his face, by capturing his figure in crisp detail on film? Renaldi leads us to believe, despite rumor to the contrary, we just might.

Renaldi photographs not only individuals we might traditionally view as Americans—a Britney Spears look-alike toting a Louis Vuitton bag through a Grey hound bus terminal, or a rodeo cowboy with elbows akimbo, hands on belt buckle, standing determinedly against the dirt-filled horizon—but also those we need to more readily consider as part of our identity. In New Jersey, Renaldi photographs a woman in a burqa and Timberland boots set against the faded geometry of a Newark street; in Los Angeles, a transgender girl works the counter of a fast food joint, lit in the sad-glamorous glow of fluorescent light.

Renaldi’s work melds two classic photographic genres—portrait and straight landscape—into a single descriptive frame that speaks as much to a sense of the indi viduals before the lens as it does to the spaces they inhabit. The omnivorous film-plane of Renaldi’s 8-by-10 camera embraces not only the individuals directly in front of it, but the environment that encompasses them as well. If there is truly a center to the American social landscape, it can be found here, in Renaldi’s precisely rendered portraits.


Web Address:
http://www.renaldi.com
http://richardrenaldi.blogspot.com
Website created by 3E Innovative