Joel Sternfeld (born June 30, 1944)[1] is an American fine-art photographer. He is best known for his large-format color pictures of contemporary American life and identity. His work contributed to the establishment of color photography as a respected artistic medium.[2][3][4] Furthering the tradition of roadside photography started by Walker Evans in the 1930s, Sternfeld documents people and places with unexpected excitement, despair, tenderness, and hope. Ever since the 1987 publication of his landmark “American Prospects,” Sternfeld’s work has interwoven the conceptual and political, while being steeped in history, landscape theory and his passion for the passage of the seasons. Sternfeld’s is a beautiful and sad portrait of America - ironic, lyrical, unfinished, seeing without judging.
Sternfeld earned a BA from Dartmouth College. He began taking color photographs in 1970 after learning the color theory of Johannes Itten and Josef Albers. Color is an important element of his photographs.
He is the recipient of two Guggenheim Fellowships and spent a year in Italy on a Rome Prize. He currently teaches at Sarah Lawrence College, where he holds the Noble Foundation Chair in Art and Cultural History. Sternfeld's work is held in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, among many other notable institutions listed in the "Collections" section.
Sternfeld initially started taking pictures in 1969 with a 35mm camera and Kodachrome slide film. These pictures mark the beginning of Sternfeld’s interest in documenting the American condition. The pictures are an insight into the development of his color arrangements which eventually resulted in a new language for color photography most notable in American Prospects. Sternfeld, in addition to other colorists like William Eggleston and Stephen Shore were crucial pioneers in the medium.[5] This body of work was first published in 2012 by Steidl publishing house.
American Prospects, (first published in 1987, most recently published in 2012) is Sternfeld's most known book and explores the complexity of human-altered landscapes in the United States. He began it in 1978, when color photography was still in its infancy as an art medium. Using a large-format camera, his photographs harken back to the traditions of 19th century photography, yet are applied to everyday scenes, like a Wet n' Wild waterpark, or a suburban street in the South.[6] He captured the faltering "prospects" (both views and opportunities) of the time. Because of his early street work, Sternfeld was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship, which funded his initial tour of the states. The American Prospects photos are of people, buildings, and mostly landscapes from the multiple trips Sternfeld took between 1978 and 1984.[7]
Campagna Romana was initially published in 1992 by Knopf publishing house. After being awarded the Rome Prize fellowship, Sternfeld extensively photographed the countryside around Rome. The pictures document the interaction between the grand romantic ruins and the invasion of modernity. Several of the images are created to form panoramic images that sometime stretch over several images. This technique presents the sweeping vistas of the countryside while also setting up contrasts between the images within each piece. In one such work, a crumbling fragment of an ancient wall huddles forlornly in one frame of a four-panel piece, surrounded by the scaffolding-clad buildings of a new apartment complex.[8]
On This Site: Landscape in Memoriam (first published with Steidl in 1996), is a collection of pictures from famous crime sites in America. The eerily normal locations are seemingly remains left behind after tragedies, their hidden stories disturbingly invisible. Next to each photograph is text about the events that happened at that location. [9]
From 1991 to 1994 Sternfeld worked with Melinda Hunt to document New York City's public cemetery on Hart Island, resulting in the book "Hart Island" (1998).[10]
Initially published by Bulfinch in 2001, and then by Steidl in 2012, Stranger Passing consists of a series of portraits that have roots in his initial project American Prospects. Over a period of fifteen years Joel Sternfeld travelled across America and took portrait photographs that form in Douglas R. Nickel’s words an “intelligent, unscientific, interpretive sampling of what Americans looked like at the century’s end.” Unlike historical portraits which represent significant people in staged surroundings, Sternfeld’s subjects are uncannily “normal”: a banker having an evening meal, a teenager collecting shopping carts in a parking lot, a homeless man holding his bedding.
Using August Sander’s classic photograph of three peasants on their way to a dance as a starting point, Sternfeld employed a conceptual strategy that amounts to a new theory of the portrait, which might be termed “The Circumstantial Portrait”.[11]
1976: Recent Color Photographs by Joel Sternfeld and Recent Work by Lois Johnson, Peale House Galleries, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, PA
1980: Daniel Wolf, Inc., New York, NY
1981: Larry Fink and Joel Sternfeld: Photographs, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA
1981: The New Color, Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, NY
1982: Joel Sternfeld, Blue Sky, Oregon Center for the Photographic Arts, Portland, OR
1984: American Prospects, Daniel Wolf, Inc., New York, NY
1984: Three Americans (Jim Goldberg, Robert Adams, Joel Sternfeld), Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY
1985: Joel Sternfeld, Higashikawa International Photo Festival, Higashikawa, Japan
1985: Joel Sternfeld, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH
1985: New Color Photography, The Halsted Gallery, Birmingham, MI
1985: Joel Sternfeld, Afterimage Gallery, Dallas, TX
1987-1989: American Prospects: The Photographs of Joel Sternfeld, Museum of Fine Arts Houston, Houston, TX; Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, MD; Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, MI; Museum of Contemporary Art, La Jolla, CA; The National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, Canada
1989: Contemporary Photographs, Pace/MacGill Gallery, New York, NY
1991: Campagna Romana: The Roman Countryside, Pace/MacGill Gallery, New York, NY
1997: On This Site, Pace Wildenstein MacGill, Los Angeles, CA
2001: Stranger Passing, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA
2001: Walking the High Line, Pace Wildenstein Gallery, New York, NY
2002: Treading on Kings: Protesting the G8 in Genoa, WhiteBox Art Center, New York, NY
2002-2003: Joel Sternfeld, The Photographers’ Gallery, London, United Kingdom
2004: American Prospects and Before, Luhring Augustine, New York, NY
2005: Sweet Earth: Experimental Utopias in America, Luhring Augustine, New York, NY
2008: The Geography of No Place: American Utopias, Buchmann Galerie, Berlin, Germany
2008: Oxbow Archive, Luhring Augustine, New York, NY
2009: Joel Sternfeld: On This Site, Buchmann Galerie, Berlin, Germany
2011: Joel Sternfeld – Farbfotografien seit 1970, Museum Folkwang, Essen, Germany.[12]