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Nicholas Martinez

10/03/18
7th
Born in New York City, Aaron Siskind graduated from the City College of New York

in 1926 and taught high school English until he became interested in photography in 1930. In

1933 he joined the Film and Photo League in New York, a group of documentary

photographers devoted to improving social conditions in contemporary society through their

pictures. While involved with the League, Siskind made some of his most successful and well-

known documentary photographs, including those for The Harlem Document (1937-40), but he

had a falling out with the organization in 1941. At the time, his work was assuming a new,

more abstract focus, as evident in Tabernacle City, a series of photographs depicting the

vernacular architecture of Bucks County, Pennsylvania. When his exhibition of this series at

the Photo League caused many members to protest his photography outright, he left the

organization and found support among Mark Rothko, Franz Kline, and other painters, who

recognized his elimination of pictorial space and his concentration on the arrangement of

objects within the picture plane as qualities aligning his work with their own. Siskind's

photographs have been widely exhibited and he won many awards for his photography,

including a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the Distinguished Photography Award from the

Friends of Photography. Siskind was a photography instructor at Chicago's Institute of Design

and served as head of the department there from 1961 to 1971. Siskind's abstract photographs

from the late 1940s and early 1950s were a major force in the development of avant-garde art

in America. In rejecting the third dimension, this work belied the notion that photography was

tied exclusively to representation. As such, Siskind's work served as an invaluable link

between the American documentary movement of the 1930s and the more introspective

photography that emerged in the 1950s and 1960s.

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