" Jerry Berndt documented the period between 1968 and 1980 in America like no other photographer. Personally involved in the anti-Vietnam War activities of the 1960s, Berndt’s work combines photojournalism with documentary, conceptual and street photography to create a unique view of America’s social constitution during these decisive years.
Berndt consistently placed himself near political conflict, systematically portraying the spectrum of America’s people and cityscapes, including the middle and working classes, as well as the inhabitants of America’s often ignored ghettos. In the early 1970s, Berndt withd rew from political protest and worked for newspapers, imbuing his pictures with a timelessness beyond current events. His work from this period shows how Americans expressed themselves culturally and socially (in beauty pageants, car showrooms, fashion shows and on the street), while also exposing the foundation of America’s changeable urban infrastructure (offices, bars, arterial highways, billboards and parking lots).
This book visualizes an important, uneasy period of transition in American’s recent history, and highlights the literal and ironic aspects of its beauty. "
Quatre-vingt-seize photographies en noir et blanc, à pleine page et en belle page, situées et datées entre 1967 et 1996, empreintes de réalisme social et d'un sens aigu de la photographie de rue.
Jerry BERNDT, Milwaukee, 1943 - Paris, 2013
Göttingen, Steidl, 2017, 22 x 19.2 cm, pleine toile grise à illustration contrecollée (Detroit, 1971), 216 pages.
9783869308982
TEXTE EN ANGLAIS
librairie couleur du temps, steidl, berndt, bernt, photographie, photographe, photojournalisme, photo-journalisme, reportage, reporter, amérique, états-unis, sociologie, culture, mœurs, politique, conflit, guerre,