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The Trailblazing Twentieth-Century Photographer Historical past Forgot 

ArtsThe Trailblazing Twentieth-Century Photographer Historical past Forgot 

On the Brooklyn Museum on a current sunny spring Sunday, I made a joyful discovery: An essential piece of pictures’s historical past has simply been recovered within the type of Consuelo Kanaga. The extremely well-executed exhibition Consuelo Kanaga: Catch the Spirit demonstrates that though she is little-known at this time, Kanaga was a serious photographer of her time. Not solely was she one of many first feminine photojournalists in the US, however she additionally participated in main photographic teams from f/64 to the New York Picture League. The present makes clear simply how large (and deep) her inventive group was, emphasizing her bonds with figures like Dorothea Lange, Berenice Abbott, Imogen Cunningham, Yamazawa Eiko, and Alfred Stieglitz. Her output ranged from socially engaged photojournalism to inventive portraiture to modernist abstraction, with a nod to spirit pictures in there, too. One might write a photographic historical past of the primary half of the Twentieth century by means of her life story. It’s a staggering resumé.

Regardless of the breadth of her oeuvre, a key Kanaga “style” emerges from the almost 200 works on view. Each {photograph} consists with immense care. Via her digicam lens, she shapes her topics right into a type of good geometry, becoming them collectively ever so neatly, like items in a puzzle. That is notably true of her portraits and architectural images, like “She is a Tree of Life” (1950) and “Clapboard Schoolhouse” (c. 1935).  On the similar time, she by no means practices the type of modernist defamiliarization typically related to such formal precision: Her human topics seize you with their intimate gaze, even choke you up, as in Kanaga’s portrait of the widow Annie Mae Merriweather, whose husband was lynched for union organizing. “Camelia in Water” (1927–28) factors to the broader Modernist custom of photographing glass and flowers in vases (see André Kertész), although the accompanying wall textual content quoting Kanaga demonstrates the deep humanity of her trendy imaginative and prescient: “I photographed it because somebody had taken it off the lapel of his coat in my studio and tossed it on the table. It was all deteriorating along the edges. It was so beautiful I couldn’t bear to see it go unheralded.”

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Left: Consuelo Kanaga, American, “She is a Tree of Life” (1950), gelatin silver print; proper: Consuelo Kanaga, “Clapboard Schoolhouse” (Nineteen Thirties), gelatin silver print (each photos courtesy the Brooklyn Museum)

Catch the Spirit does Kanaga justice, too, in its consideration to element. By first introducing the photographer within the context of her group, viewers get an instantaneous sense of who she was as each an artist and an individual. (It’s additionally a pleasant contact that the identical type of digicam and movie she used is on show, since this aspect of pictures is so simply obscured in our dematerialized digital world.) The exhibition design maximizes its impression right down to the hanging juxtaposition of purple and blue-gray wall paint colours, which makes the room itself really feel like a tightly composed murals. In a considerably uncommon however welcome transfer, a number of differing prints of a single {photograph} hold subsequent to one another in locations, demonstrating the technical aspect of Kanaga’s printing as she experimented with framing and publicity. (Curator Drew Sawyer continues to set a excessive bar for himself for the upcoming 2026 Whitney Biennial, which he’s co-organizing with Marcela Guerrero.) And whereas business, documentary, and “fine art” pictures are sometimes siloed off from each other, Catch the Spirit does no such factor, revealing the deep connections between these modes by means of the lifetime of an important Twentieth-century photographer that historical past forgot. 

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Left: Consuelo Kanaga, American, “Annie Mae Merriweather” (1935), gelatin silver print; proper: Consuelo Kanaga, “Camelia in Water” (1927–28), gelatin silver print (each photos courtesy the Brooklyn Museum)IMG 7839

Set up view of Consuelo Kanaga: Catch the Spirit (photograph Julia Curl/Hyperallergic)DIG E 2025 Consuelo Kanaga Catch the Spirit 013 Paula Abreu Pita PS22 General Use JPEG

Set up view of Consuelo Kanaga: Catch the Spirit (photograph by Paula Abreu Pita; courtesy the Brooklyn Museum)IMG 7807

Set up view of Consuelo Kanaga: Catch the Spirit (photograph Julia Curl/Hyperallergic)

Consuelo Kanaga: Catch the Spirit continues on the Brooklyn Museum (200 Japanese Parkway, Brooklyn) by means of August 3. The exhibition was organized by the Brooklyn Museum in collaboration with Fundación MAPFRE and the San Francisco Museum of Trendy Artwork. It was curated by Pauline Vermare with Imani Williford.

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