Ralph Gibson (born January 16, 1939)[citation needed] is an American art photographer[1] best known for his photographic books. His images often incorporate fragments with erotic and mysterious undertones, building narrative meaning through contextualization and surreal juxtaposition.
He began his professional career as an assistant to Dorothea Lange from 1961 to 1962 and went on to work with Robert Frank on two films between 1967 and 1968.[2]
Gibson has maintained a lifelong fascination with books and book-making. Since the appearance in 1970 of The Somnambulist, his work has been steadily impelled towards the printed page. In 1969 Gibson moved to New York, where he formed Lustrum Press in order to exert control over the reproduction of his work.[3] Lustrum Press also published Larry Clark's Tulsa (1971).[4] To date he has produced over 40 monographs, the more recent being State of the Axe (Yale University Press, 2008) and Nude (Taschen, 2009). His photographs are included in over one hundred and fifty museum collections around the world, and have appeared in hundreds of exhibitions. Including his own private museum in Busan, Korea, Goeun Museum of Photography. He has worked exclusively with the Leica M35mmrangefinder cameras for almost 50 years.
Commissioned by Italian luxury label Bottega Veneta, Gibson photographed models Raquel Zimmermann and Mathias Lauridsen on locations in Milan for the brand's fall/winter 2013 advertisements.[6] Gibson's Hand Through a Doorway was used on the inner sleeve of the 1979 album Unknown Pleasures by UK rock band Joy Division. A unique set with prints of the Beatles was made by Gibson in August 1966 for a proposed book for Capitol Records.
In the summer 2016, on the occasion of the opening of the Galerie Thierry Bigaignon, Gibson presented a new series of color photographs entitled Vertical Horizon.[7]
Selection and sequencing of the photographs and the layout of each book were usually determined by Ralph Gibson. Each series of work, like the trilogy and Chiaroscuro, is at least accompanied by a short statement. In other publications there are explanatory texts with biographical, esthetic and also practical considerations, particularly in more recent books.
The Somnambulist. Lustrum Press, New York 1970. ISBN 0-912810-09-2.
Déjà-Vu. Lustrum, New York 1973. ISBN 0-912810-06-8.
Days at Sea. Lustrum, New York 1975. ISBN 0-912810-15-7.
Syntax. Lustrum, New York 1983. ISBN 0-912810-39-4.
L'Anonyme. Aperture/Contrejour, New York/Paris 1986. ISBN 978-0-89381-249-2.
Tropism. Catalogue accompanying the first retrospective at International Center of Photography (ICP), curated by Miles Barth, Aperture, New York 1987. ISBN 0-89381-274-9; HC: ISBN 0-893812-55-2. UK ed.: Phaidon, Oxford, ISBN 0-7148-2502-6; Italian ed.: Alinari, Florence, ISBN 88-7292-096-5 (and presumably a Japanese ed.)
À propos de Mary Jane. Cahier d'images/Contrejour, Paris 1990. ISBN 2-85949-899-0.
Chiaroscuro. Marval, 1990. ISBN 978-2-86234-045-6.
L'Histoire de France. Preface by Marguerite Duras. Aperture/Paris Audiovisuel, New York/Paris 1991. ISBN 978-0-89381-471-7.
Infanta. Introduction by Alexandra Anderson-Spivy, text by Gibson, afterword by Mary Gaitskill. Takarajima, New York/Tokio 1995. ISBN 978-1-883489-13-7.
Lichtjahre. Catalogue accompanying the exhibition at Frankfurter Kunstverein in Germany, ed. by Peter Weiermair. Edition Stemmle, Zürich 1996. ISBN 978-3-908162-29-2; HC: ISBN 978-3-908162-27-8.
Overtones. Diptychs and Proportions. Introduction by curator Tom Beck, texts by Gibson, Max Kozloff, Sarah Greenough, Eric Fischl a. o. Edition Stemmle, Zürich 1998. ISBN 978-3-908161-10-3.
Deus ex machina. Retrospective book, ed. by Simone Philippi. Introduction and texts to the series by Gibson, chronology by Miles Barth, annex. Taschen, Köln 1999, ISBN 3-8228-6607-5 (Engl./French/German).
Ex libris. Photographs and Constructs. Text by Gibson. PowerHouse, New York 2001. ISBN 1-57687-100-2. Limited edition, ISBN 1-57687-114-2.
Brazil. Damiani, Bologna 2005. ISBN 88-89431-12-1.
Light Strings: Impressions of the Guitar. With Andy Summers. Chronicle, 2004. ISBN 0-8118-4324-6.
Nude. Conversation between Gibson and Eric Fischl. „Collector's edition“ of 1200 copies. Taschen, Köln 2009, ISBN 978-3-8365-1189-6 (Engl./French/German).
Re-edition: Taschen, Köln 2018. ISBN 978-3-8365-6888-3 (Engl./French/German).
{Passé Imparfait}. Exhibition and book featuring early photographs 1960–1970. Texts by Gibson and Gilles Mora. Centre national des arts plastiques, Contrejour, Paris 2012. ISBN 979-10-90294-05-9 (French/Engl.).
Mono. Lustrum, New York 2013. ISBN 978-1-4675-8529-3 (Engl./Chinese).
Political Abstraction. Exhibition catalogue of a work series with color and black-and-white photographs. Mary Boone Gallery, New York, and Center for Creative Photography (CCP), Tucson. Lustrum, New York 2015. ISBN 978-1-4773-0994-0.
The Black Trilogy. Text by Gilles Mora. University of Texas Press, Austin 2017. ISBN 978-1-4773-1626-9.
Self-Exposure. Autobiography. Heni, 2018. ISBN 978-1-912122-10-3.
Sacred Land: Israel Before and After Time. Preface by Martin Cohen, afterword by Rabbi David Ellenson. Lustrum, New York 2020. ISBN 978-1-942884-69-9.
Refractions 2. Lustrum, New York 2021.
Salon Littéraire. France 1971–2022. Lustrum Press/Brilliant Graphics, New York 2023.
Secret of Light. Catalogue accompanying the retrospective at Deichtorhallen Hamburg, hrsg. von Sabine Schnakenberg. Kehrer, Heidelberg 2023. ISBN 9783969001042 (German/Engl.).
Contributions to publications and as editor
Beside his role as founder and co-editor of Lustrum Press, Ralph Gibson contributed photographs, contact sheets and explanatory texts to publications, especially to Lustrum's Theory series.
Darkroom. Ed. by Wynn Bullock. Photographs and essay by Gibson a. o. Lustrum, New York 1977. ISBN 0-912810-20-3, Pb: ISBN 0-912810-19-X.
Nude: Theory. Ed. by Jain Kelly. Photographs and essay by Gibson a. o. Lustrum, New York 1979. ISBN 0-912810-24-6, Pb: ISBN 0-912810-33-5, S. 73–93.
SX-70 Art. Ed. by Gibson, introduction by Max Kozloff, texts by Isaac Asimov and Victor McElheny. Lustrum, New York 1979. ISBN 0-912810-23-8.
Landscape: Theory. Ed. by John Flattau, Ralph Gibson and Arne Lewis. Lustrum, New York 1980. ISBN 0-912810-27-0.
Contact: Theory. Ed. by Robert Adams. Photographs and essay by Gibson a. o. Lustrum, New York 1982. ISBN 0-912810-31-9.
Portrait: Theory. Ed. by John Flattau, Ralph Gibson and Arne Lewis. Lustrum, New York 1981. ISBN 0-912810-34-3. (No contribution by Gibson apart from the cover photograph.)
Nine by Nine. Photographs and essay by Gibson a. o. Lustrum, New York 1984. ISBN 0-912810-47-5.
Ralph Gibson: Early Work. In: The Archive 24. Center for Creative Photography, Tucson, AZ, 1987.
Collections
Ralph Gibson's work is represented in countless public, private and corporate collections worldwide. Almost 50 universities in the USA have exhibits by him in their collections. In New York alone, six important museums, the MoMA, the Whitney Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the International Center of Photography, the Brooklyn Museum and the George Eastman House in Rochester, have numerous photographs by him in their collections. In addition to many other American museums, Gibson's photographs can also be found in several Australian, Japanese, Israeli, German, Italian and French collections, as well as in institutions in other countries.[13]
^Buck, Joan Juliet (December 10, 2010). "Full House". The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-06-11.<the somewhat gossipy ref just states that Marcasiano is a designer, not even a fashion designer, and no word about travels.