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In 1978, Wall installed the work as a glowing storefront display, an attempt to expose the “inherent links between high art” and “the commercial spectacle.” 3. Wall’s later photographs shift from conceptual commentary to a kind of heightened materialism.
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Jeff Wall based this elaborately staged photograph on the...
- Jeff Wall. Milk. 1984
Jeff Wall Milk 1984. Not on view. Wall began making large...
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Jeff Wall’s work synthesizes the essentials of photography with elements from other art forms—including painting, cinema, and literature—in a complex mode that he calls “cinematography.” His pictures range from classical reportage to elaborate constructions and montages, usually produced at the larger scale traditionally identified ...
Jeff Wall is a leading contemporary Canadian photographer whose work is concerned with ideas about the nature of images, representation, and memory. View Jeff Wall’s 222 artworks on artnet. Find an in-depth biography, exhibitions, original artworks for sale, the latest news, and sold auction prices.
- Canadian
Jeffrey Wall, OC, RSA (born September 29, 1946) is a Canadian photographer. He is artist best known for his large-scale back-lit Cibachrome photographs and art history writing.
- Photographer
- Vancouver School
- Hasselblad Award (2002)
Known as both an artist and art historian, Jeff Wall is a Canadian photographer and writer whose work simultaneously showcases and challenges some of the most dominant assumptions about art and art-making.
- Canadian
- September 29, 1946
- Vancouver, Canada
Jeff Wall es un fotógrafo canadiense nacido en Vancouver ( Canadá) en el año 1946, ciudad en la que reside y trabaja, es una de las figuras clave en la escena artística de su ciudad durante años. En 2002 fue premiado con el prestigioso Premio Hasselblad . Su obra ha ayudado a definir el llamado fotoconceptualismo.
20 de nov. de 2004 · Jeff Wall Milk 1984. Not on view. Wall began making large backlit transparencies in the late 1970s. He had experimented with filmmaking, and he felt that staging scenes for the camera could radically broaden the potential of still photography.