Barbara Crane

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Barbara Crane
Born(1928-03-19)March 19, 1928
Chicago, Illinois
DiedAugust 7, 2019(2019-08-07) (aged 91)
Chicago, Illinois
EducationMills College (’45–’48); B.A. Art History (’50), New York University; M.S. Photography (’66), Illinois Institute of Technology
OccupationPhotographer

Barbara Crane (March 19, 1928 – August 7, 2019) was an American artist photographer born in Chicago, IL. Crane worked with a variety of materials including Polaroid, gelatin silver, and platinum prints among others. She was known for her experimental and innovative work that challenges the by incorporating sequencing, , and . Naomi Rosenblum notes that Crane "pioneered the use of repetition to convey the mechanical character of much of contemporary life, even in its recreational aspects."[1][2]

Crane was the recipient of fellowships and grants, such as the Illinois Arts Council Artists Fellowship (2001), National Endowment for the Arts Grant (1988, 1974), Polaroid Corporation Materials Grants (1979–1995), and John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship in Photography (1979).[3] Crane has also been an honored educator for the (1993); a distinguished artist at the Union League Club in Chicago, Illinois (2006); and a distinguished artist at Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island (2006). Her awards also include the (1987) and the (Chicago, Illinois, 2009). In 2013, Barbara Crane was named artist honoree at the Hyde Park Art Center in Chicago, Illinois.

Crane's work is represented in numerous public collections including the International Center for Photography, New York City; the George Eastman Museum, Rochester, NY; the Art Institute of Chicago; the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles; the National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; and the .[4][3]

Crane's archive resides at the Center for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona in Tucson, AZ.

Education and teaching career[]

Crane began her studies in art history at Mills College in Oakland, California in 1945. She transferred to New York University in 1948.

In 1950, she received her BA in art history from New York University. After recommencing her career in photography, Barbara Crane showed a portfolio of her work to Aaron Siskind in 1964 and was admitted to the Graduate Program in Photography at the Institute of Design at the Illinois Institute of Technology.[5] Crane then studied under Siskind at the Institute of Design, Illinois Institute of Technology, and received her MS from the Institute in 1966.[3][6]

Crane’s master’s degree thesis focused on “sculptural patterns through abstractions of the human body.”[5] The images for this series depict bodies against white or black backgrounds – the overexposed, overdeveloped nature of the film turns these bodies into abstract outlines. John Rohrbach states, “each body almost dissolves, becoming a sinuous river flowing across a snowy landscape. This unnerving disconnect between what is seen and what is known would become a central theme of her career.”[7]

While in the MA program at the Institute of Design at the Illinois Institute of Technology, Crane was hired to start and chair the photography program at New Trier High School in Winnetka, Illinois where she taught for three years. Eighteen months after graduating from ID, she secured a position to teach photography at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago which she held from 1967 (becoming a full professor in 1978) through 1995.[7] Throughout her teaching career, Crane also traveled as both a visiting professor and artist for institutions including Bezalel Academy of Art and Design in Jerusalem (1987), Cornell University in Ithaca, New York (1983), the School of the Museum of Fine Arts of Boston (1979), University of the Arts in Philadelphia (1977), and the Institute of Design at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago (1969).

In 1971, Crane visited Ansel Adams at his home to show him a selection of her work. Adams told an assistant “See I told you photographers could still do something different” upon viewing her Repeats series.[5] After this encounter, Adams hired Crane to teach workshops at Yosemite between 1977-1980.[5] During Crane’s Guggenheim Fellowship (1979), she collaborated with the Center for Creative Photography in Tucson, Arizona to create a career retrospective of her work. During her time in Boston, she formed a relationship with the Polaroid Corporation and through the she experimented with Polaroid black & white and color photographic materials in numerous series.

In 1995, Crane became Professor Emeritus at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.[4]

Projects[]

  • Official Photographer for Commission on Chicago Historical and Architectural Landmarks (1972-1979). During this seven-year project, Crane photographed the design and contextual relationships of buildings in the Chicago area.[8]
  • Neon Series (1969) is a series “juxtaposing neon lights over faces like ceremonial urban masks”.[5] The photographs capture people's faces exiting the Carson Pirie Scott Department store. John Rohrbach notes that the overlay of neon on the shoppers’ faces suggests “commerce’s domination” over them.[7]
  • People of the North Portal (1970-1971) captures the reactions of people exiting Chicago’s Museum of Science and Industry – this series focuses on the human experience.[9]
  • Chicago Beaches and Parks (1972) series takes after the stylizations of street photography. Crane photographed unposed individuals during their visits to parks and beaches around Chicago. notes, “they deliver a grand sociological study of public activity: dancing, wooing, tending to children, showing off, catching sun and even taking snapshots”.[7]
  • Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina (1974) combines multiple film formats (4x5 and half-frame 35 mm film). This project depicts the residents and all the houses on the at sunrise and sunset.
  • Baxter Labs (1974-1975) is a corporate commission for the Baxter Travenol Laboratories, a pharmaceutical company located in Deerfield, Illinois. The company approached Crane to create twenty-six murals measuring approximately 8 x 10 feet each that montage lab equipment with scenes of Crane’s choosing. The murals no longer exist, but Crane retains transparency copies.[5]
  • Repeats (1969-1978) and “Petites Choses” (1974-1975) combine series of repeated images into patterns by printing strips of 35mm film frames directly onto photographic paper. Crane refers to music as an influence in these series stating “while doing the ‘Repeats’ and ‘Petites Choses’” series, I was taking notes at the symphony as visual diagrams of the crescendos, legatos, and staccatos in order to widen my visual experience.”[5] These series form a tapestry of images influenced by her musical interests.
  • Chicago Loop (1976-1978) contains images of building walls in Chicago’s downtown Loop. The photographs were taken with a 5 x 7 inch view camera and visualized on the ground glass of the camera so as to abstract the interplay and adjacencies of the layers of buildings and emphasize the repetition, layering and confusion of shapes and forms.[10]
  • Commuter Discourse (1978) focuses on light and shadow. Crane took photographs of rush-hour crowds using a 35mm Leica with a 21mm wide-angle lens. The resulting images depict exaggerated body parts and shadows that extend to the edges of the frame. The focus of the series lay in the bodies rather than the identities of the individuals.[5][7]
  • Monster Series, Chicago Dry Docks (1983) utilizes a and on-camera flash to distort boat details.
  • Visions of Enarc (1983-1986) experiments with wide angle, close up, flash and overexposure influencing the later “Wipe Outs”. Crane’s statement notes that Visions of Enarc “reveals a natural word that I have twisted, thereby producing an alternative world simultaneously surreal, ominous, and romantic.”[11]
  • Wipe Outs (1986) also experiments with flash and overexposure. The overexposure erases individual identity but captures common human behaviors.[5]
  • Objets Trouvé (1982-1988) stems from Crane’s interest in discarded objects, their life cycles and transformations. She notes that the series “embodies a suggestion of human evolution and human fatalities”.[11]
  • Coloma to Covert (1987-2013) is a series comprising 26 years of work. These photographs were taken in a wooded area along Lake Michigan in southwestern Michigan between the two small towns of Coloma and Covert where Crane purchased a cabin in 1987. The series leaves the viewer with an uneasy feeling and focuses on form, abstraction, light and other elements of the nature of the area.
  • Sand Findings (1992-1993) is a series that uses very limited focus to place parts of the image in focus and others out of focus. The resulting images make space difficult to determine.[7]
  • Schisms (2001) is a series that combines color prints from the forest to create interesting and unique pairings.
  • Still Lifes (1997-2002) isolates dead animals and found natural objects against a black background.
  • Inner Circles (2003-2004) These photographs consist of multiple circular frames reminiscent of peepholes with repeated images of nature or the city taken in both Chicago and the woodlands.[7]

Selected Retrospective and Solo Exhibitions[]

  • 2014 Barbara Crane: Chicago Loop 1976 – 1978, Higher Pictures, New York, NY.
  • 2013 Barbara Crane and John Miller: a Colorful Couple, Chicago Photography Gallery, two-person, Chicago, IL.
  • 2012 Barbara Crane: Challenging Vision, Brierly Gallery, New Trier High School, Winnetka, IL.
  • 2011 Barbara Crane: Challenging Vision, Griffin Museum of Photography, Winchester, MA.
  • 2011 Barbara Crane: An Infernal Beauty, ThinkArt, Chicago, IL.
  • 2010 Barbara Crane: Private Views, Stephen Wirtz Gallery, San Francisco, CA.
  • 2010 Barbara Crane: Challenging Vision, Galerie François Paviot, Paris, France.
  • 2009-2010 Barbara Crane: Challenging Vision, Chicago Cultural Center, Chicago, IL.
  • 2009-2010 Barbara Crane: Repeats, Higher Pictures, New York, NY.
  • 2009-2010 Private Views, Aperture Foundation, New York, NY.
  • 2009-2010 Barbara Crane: Then/Now, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL.
  • 2009 Barbara Crane: Challenging Vision, Amon Carter Museum, Fort Worth, TX.
  • 2009 Barbara Crane: Private Views – Public Spaces, Stephen Daiter Gallery, Chicago, IL.
  • 2008-2009 Barbara Crane: Selected Early Works, Higher Pictures, New York, NY.
  • 2005 Barbara Crane: Snap to Grid, FLATFILE Gallery, Chicago, IL.
  • 2004 Barbara Crane: Still Lifes – Natures Mortes, Hellenic American Union, Athens, Greece.
  • 2004 Barbara Crane: Still Lifes – Natures Mortes, Chicago Cultural Center, Chicago, IL.
  • 2003 Barbara Crane: Mid-Career at Seventy-Five, Stephen Daiter Gallery, Chicago, IL.
  • 2003 Barbara Crane: Natures Mortes, Photosynkyria, Macedonia Museum of Modern Art, Thessaloniki, Greece.
  • 2002 Barbara Crane: Urban Anomalies, Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago, IL.
  • 2001-02 Barbara Crane: Chicago Loop, LaSalle Bank, and Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago, IL.
  • 1997 Barbara Crane, Lallak+Tom, Chicago, IL.
  • 1997 Barbara Crane: Woodland Vestiges: From Coloma to Covert, Mills College Art Gallery, Oakland, CA.
  • 1994 Sticks and Stones, Gallery 954, Chicago, IL.
  • 1994 Barbara Crane: Photographie, Galerie Suzel Berna, Paris, France.
  • 1993 Harmonic Distortions, Prague House of Photography, Prague, Czech Republic.
  • 1993 Transformations and Aberrations, Gallery 954, Chicago, IL.
  • 1992-93 Barbara Crane: Israeli Suite, Spertus Museum, Chicago, IL.
  • 1992 Coloma to Covert, Etc, Middle Tennessee State University Photo Gallery, Murfreesboro, TN.
  • 1990 Barbara Crane Photographs: Misrepresentations, May Gallery, Sverdrup Technology Center, Webster University, St Louis, MO.
  • 1990 Barbara Crane, Photography Center Gallery, The 92nd St Y, New York, NY.
  • 1989 Barbara Crane: Hanmadang Gallery, Seoul, Korea.
  • 1989 Barbara Crane: New Work, Jones Troyer Fitzpatrick Gallery, Washington, DC.
  • 1987 Barbara Crane: Distortion by Exaggeration, Museum of Contemporary Photography, Columbia College, Chicago, IL.
  • 1987 Bezalel Academy of Art & Design, Mt. Scopus, Jerusalem, Israel.
  • 1986 Tweed Museum of Art, Univ. of Minnesota, Duluth, MN
  • 1985 Barbara Crane: Photographs, Jones Troyer Gallery, Washington, DC.
  • 1983 Barbara Crane, Nexus Gallery, Atlanta, GA.
  • 1983 Barbara Crane, Herbert E. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell Univ., Ithaca, NY.
  • 1983 Barbara Crane, Douglas Elliot Gallery, San Francisco, CA
  • 1983 Objet Trouve, Int'l Museum of Photography, George Eastman House, Rochester, NY.
  • 1981 Recent Work, Young Hoffman Gallery, Chicago, IL.
  • 1980 Barbara Crane, Vision Gallery, Boston, MA.
  • 1978 Barbara Crane, Center for Photographic Studies, Louisville, KY.
  • 1975 Barbara Crane, Friends of Photography, Carmel, CA.
  • 1974 Barbara Crane, F22 Gallery, Sante Fe, NM.
  • 1973 Barbara Crane, University of Iowa Museum, Iowa City, IA.
  • 1972 People of the North Portal, Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago, IL.
  • 1969 Barbara Crane, Friends of Photography, Carmel, CA.
  • 1968 Barbara Crane, Hunter Gallery, Aspen, CO.

Publications[]

  • Barbara Crane: Challenging Vision, retrospective monograph, Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs, July 2009, essays by John Rohrbach and Abigail Foestner, 285 images, 252 pgs.
  • Barbara Crane: Private Views, monograph, Aperture Foundation Foundation, Feb 2009, essay by Barbara Hitchcock, 103 images, 112 pgs.
  • Barbara Crane: Grids, exhibition catalog, May 2005, essay by Claire Cass, 11 images, 12 pgs.
  • Barbara Crane Still Lifes: Natures Mortes, exhibition catalog, Chicago Cultural Center, 2004, essayby Sofia Zutautas, 13 images, 16 pgs.
  • “Barbara Crane: Human Forms”, Camera Obscura LV (#55), Winter 2003, 16 pg portfolio insert.
  • Barbara Crane & John F. Miller: Together, exhibition catalog, FLATFILE Gallery, Chicago, IL, Sept 2002, essays by Claire Wolf Krantz and Michael A. Weinstein, 6 images, 16 pgs.
  • Barbara Crane: Urban Anomalies, exhibition catalog, Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago, IL, 2002, essay by Michael A. Weinstein, 20 images, 48 pgs.
  • Barbara Crane: Chicago Loop, monograph, LaSalle Bank, Chicago, IL, Feb 2002, essay by Sarah Anne McNear, 40 images, 60 pgs.
  • Barbara Crane: 1948-1980, retrospective monograph, Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, 1981, essays by Estelle Jussim and Paul Vanderbilt, 129 images, 138 pgs.
  • Barbara Crane: The Evolution of a Vision, exhibition catalog, Albin O. Kuhn Library & Gallery, University of Maryland Baltimore County, Polaroid Corporation, April 1983, essay by Tom Beck, 25 images, 22 pgs.

Collections[]

Crane’s work is held in numerous collections both nationally and internationally. The following is a short selection of those collections:

References[]

  1. ^ Rosenblum, Naomi. A History of Women Photographers. New York: Abbeville Press Publishers, 2000. 279.
  2. ^ "Barbara Crane Obituary". Chicago Tribune Media Group Publication. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c Heller, Jules and Nancy G. Heller, eds. North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century. New York: Routledge, 2013.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b "Document sans titre". barbaracrane.desordre.net.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i Foerstner, Abigail. “The Path to the Perfect Photograph” in Barbara Crane: Challenging Vision. Chicago: City of Chicago, Department of Cultural Affairs, 2009.
  6. ^ Rosenblum, Naomi. A History of Women Photographers. New York: Abbeville Press Publishers, 2000. 317.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Rohrbach, John. “Seeing Life Differently” in Barbara Crane: Challenging Vision. Chicago: City of Chicago, Department of Cultural Affairs, 2009.
  8. ^ Rosenblum, Naomi. A History of Women Photographers. New York: Abbeville Press Publishers, 2000. 239.
  9. ^ "Museum of Contemporary Photography". www.mocp.org.
  10. ^ "Barbara Crane".
  11. ^ Jump up to: a b http://barbaracrane.desordre.net/texts/general_statement.pdf
  12. ^ Barbara Crane, Art Institute of Chicago, https://www.artic.edu/collection?q=%22barbara%20crane%22

External links[]

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