The Face of Minnesota
By (Author) John Szarkowski
Foreword by Verlyn Klinkenborg
Afterword by Richard Benson
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
14th May 2008
United States
General
Non Fiction
779.99776
Hardback
320
Width 216mm, Height 305mm, Spine 28mm
Ducks in a stream, the bridge at St. Anthony Falls, streets of cities and towns, a fish in a net, the glittering lakes seen under low skies. The Face of Minnesota
is a fresh, simple, unpretentious statement of a place and time by people who know what Minnesota is because they live there. Minor White, Aperture
, 1958
John Szarkowski is the single most important curator that photography has ever had. Looking at his photographs created over the last fifty years makes me want to weep. They are truly American pictures; one feels his desire to show not just what America was but what it still can be. Ingrid Sischy, Vanity Fair,
2005
Originally commissioned to commemorate Minnesotas centennial in 1958 and out of print for nearly forty years, The Face of Minnesota
is a lost masterpiece of photography and an eloquent tribute to the people and places of the North Star state. Republished in celebration of the states sesquicentennial, this beautifully produced edition includes contemporary essays about John Szarkowskis impact on American photography and introduces his work to new generations of Minnesotans.
Featuring more than 175 arresting photographs as well as essays filled with wit and affection, The Face of Minnesota
opens with this statement: This book is about Minnesota now. But as a mature man carries on his face and in his bearing the history of his past, so does the look of a place today show its past-what it has been and what it has believed in. Though Minnesota has changed dramatically during the past fifty years, The Face of Minnesota
reveals the simple beauty of the imprint of the past and its deep resonance today.
John Szarkowski (19252007) was director of the photography program at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, where he transformed our understanding of the art of photography through influential exhibitions and books, including Looking at Photographs
(1973). In 2005 his work was surveyed in a traveling exhibition, accompanied by the book John Szarkowski: Photographs.
Verlyn Klinkenborg joined the editorial board of the New York Times
in 1997. He is the author of several works, including The Rural Life.
Richard Benson has worked as a photographer and printer since 1966. He teaches at Yale University and is the coauthor, with John Szarkowski, of A Maritime Album: 100 Photographs and Their Stories.