Red Ceiling, Greenwood, Mississippi
Photograph
1973 (photographed), 1980 (printed)
1973 (photographed), 1980 (printed)
Artist/Maker |
William Eggleston (born 1939) changed the course of colour photography by translating the intense, super-real quality of colour transparencies into the saturated hues of dye transfer prints. Adopting processes previously used in advertising – the dye transfer technique was predominantly commercial at the time – Eggleston set a precedent for colour documentary and art photography that remains influential today. His work pinpoints the moment when colour began to be generally accepted as part of the language of art photography, and his subtle choices of camera positions loosened up photographers’ ideas about viewpoint.
In the early 1970s Eggleston began to photograph the realities of his own landscape in the American South. He finds ‘the uncommonness of the commonplace’ in ordinary scenes and places, as photographer Raymond Moore described it. Inspired by family snapshots, he focuses on the everyday and the overlooked in order to reveal them as remarkable.
In the early 1970s Eggleston began to photograph the realities of his own landscape in the American South. He finds ‘the uncommonness of the commonplace’ in ordinary scenes and places, as photographer Raymond Moore described it. Inspired by family snapshots, he focuses on the everyday and the overlooked in order to reveal them as remarkable.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Title | Red Ceiling, Greenwood, Mississippi (popular title) |
Materials and techniques | dye transfer colour print |
Brief description | Photograph by William Eggleston, 'Greenwood, Mississippi (red ceiling)', dye transfer print, 1973 |
Physical description | Colour photograph of an interior with red walls and a red ceiling. |
Dimensions |
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Copy number | No 1 of 12 |
Summary | William Eggleston (born 1939) changed the course of colour photography by translating the intense, super-real quality of colour transparencies into the saturated hues of dye transfer prints. Adopting processes previously used in advertising – the dye transfer technique was predominantly commercial at the time – Eggleston set a precedent for colour documentary and art photography that remains influential today. His work pinpoints the moment when colour began to be generally accepted as part of the language of art photography, and his subtle choices of camera positions loosened up photographers’ ideas about viewpoint. In the early 1970s Eggleston began to photograph the realities of his own landscape in the American South. He finds ‘the uncommonness of the commonplace’ in ordinary scenes and places, as photographer Raymond Moore described it. Inspired by family snapshots, he focuses on the everyday and the overlooked in order to reveal them as remarkable. |
Bibliographic reference | Myth, Manners and Memory: Photographers of the American South Brightn: Photoworks, 2010. ISBN: 978-1-903-796436. |
Collection | |
Accession number | PH.247-1981 |
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Record created | September 22, 2008 |
Record URL |
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