Richard Misrach
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Richard Misrach (born 1949) is an American
photographer A photographer (the Greek φῶς (''phos''), meaning "light", and γραφή (''graphê''), meaning "drawing, writing", together meaning "drawing with light") is a person who uses a camera to make photographs. Duties and types of photograp ...
. He has photographed the deserts of the
American West The Western United States (also called the American West, the Western States, the Far West, the Western territories, and the West) is census regions United States Census Bureau As American settlement in the U.S. expanded westward, the mea ...
, and pursued projects that document the changes in the
natural environment The natural environment or natural world encompasses all life, biotic and abiotic component, abiotic things occurring nature, naturally, meaning in this case not artificiality, artificial. The term is most often applied to Earth or some parts ...
that have been wrought by various man-made factors such as
urban sprawl Urban sprawl (also known as suburban sprawl or urban encroachment) is defined as "the spreading of urban developments (such as houses and shopping centers) on undeveloped land near a city". Urban sprawl has been described as the unrestricted ...
,
tourism Tourism is travel for pleasure, and the Commerce, commercial activity of providing and supporting such travel. World Tourism Organization, UN Tourism defines tourism more generally, in terms which go "beyond the common perception of tourism as ...
,
industrialization Industrialisation (British English, UK) American and British English spelling differences, or industrialization (American English, US) is the period of social and economic change that transforms a human group from an agrarian society into an i ...
, floods, fires, petrochemical manufacturing, and the testing of explosives and
nuclear weapons A nuclear weapon is an explosive device that derives its destructive force from nuclear reactions, either nuclear fission, fission (fission or atomic bomb) or a combination of fission and nuclear fusion, fusion reactions (thermonuclear weap ...
by the military. Curator Anne Wilkes Tucker writes that Misrach's practice has been "driven yissues of
aesthetics Aesthetics (also spelled esthetics) is the branch of philosophy concerned with the nature of beauty and taste (sociology), taste, which in a broad sense incorporates the philosophy of art.Slater, B. H.Aesthetics ''Internet Encyclopedia of Ph ...
,
politics Politics () is the set of activities that are associated with decision-making, making decisions in social group, groups, or other forms of power (social and political), power relations among individuals, such as the distribution of Social sta ...
,
ecology Ecology () is the natural science of the relationships among living organisms and their Natural environment, environment. Ecology considers organisms at the individual, population, community (ecology), community, ecosystem, and biosphere lev ...
, and
sociology Sociology is the scientific study of human society that focuses on society, human social behavior, patterns of Interpersonal ties, social relationships, social interaction, and aspects of culture associated with everyday life. The term sociol ...
."Tucker, Anne Wilkes & Rebecca Solnit. ''Crimes and Splendors: the Desert Cantos of Richard Misrach''. Bulfinch / Museum of Fine Arts Houston, 1996. In a 2011 interview, Misrach noted: "My career, in a way, has been about navigating these two extremes - the political and the aesthetic."Brown, Pete
Interview with Richard Misrach.
Spot magazine, 2011.
Describing his philosophy, Tracey Taylor of ''
The New York Times ''The New York Times'' (''NYT'') is an American daily newspaper based in New York City. ''The New York Times'' covers domestic, national, and international news, and publishes opinion pieces, investigative reports, and reviews. As one of ...
'' writes that " israch'simages are for the historical record, not reportage."Taylor, Tracey
"Richard Misrach Reveals His Images of Oakland-Berkeley Fire,"
the'' New York Times''. October 21, 2011.
David Littlejohn of ''
The Wall Street Journal ''The Wall Street Journal'' (''WSJ''), also referred to simply as the ''Journal,'' is an American newspaper based in New York City. The newspaper provides extensive coverage of news, especially business and finance. It operates on a subscriptio ...
'' called Misrach "the most interesting and original photographer of his generation." Littlejohn noted Misrach's work in a large scale, color format that defied the prior expectations of fine art photography.Littlejohn, David
"Richard Misrach , The Oakland-Berkeley Fire Aftermath: Following the Flames."
The ''Wall Street Journal'', December 20, 2011.


Early life and education

Misrach was born in 1949 in Los Angeles, California. In 1967 he left Los Angeles for the University of California, Berkeley, where he obtained a B.A. in Psychology after briefly pursuing a degree in Mathematics. While on campus he was confronted with the anti-war riots and began photographing the events around him;Elder, Sean.

" ''Los Angeles Times'', November 4, 1990.
he also learned the rudiments of photography with Paul Herzoff, Roger Minick, and Steve Fitch at the ASUC Berkeley Studio.


Early work

Misrach's first major photography project, completed in 1974, depicted homeless residents of Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley, California. This suite of photographs was shown at the
International Center of Photography The International Center of Photography (ICP) is a photography museum and school at 84 Ludlow Street on the Lower East Side of Manhattan in New York City. ICP's photographic collection, reading room, and archives are at Mana Contemporary in Jer ...
and published as a book, ''Telegraph 3 AM,''Caponigro, John Paul
"Richard Misrach" (interview)
in ''View Camera'' magazine, September/October 1998 issue.
which won a Western Book Award in 1975. Having hoped that ''Telegraph 3 AM'' would help improve life on the streets, Misrach was frustrated by the book's minimal impact and retreated to the deserts of Southern California, Arizona, and Baja California, where he took photographs devoid of human figures entirely. Working at night with a
strobe A strobe light or stroboscopic lamp, commonly called a strobe, is a device used to produce regular flashes of light. It is one of a number of devices that can be used as a stroboscope. The word originated from the Ancient Greek ('), meaning ...
that illuminated the landscape around him, he experimented with unusual printing techniques in the university darkroom and created richly hued, split-toned silver prints. A resulting 1979 book was published without a title or a single word of accompanying text besides nominal identifying information on the book's spine. In 1976 he traveled to Stonehenge to continue his split-toned night studies, and in 1978 he began working in color on journeys to Greece, Louisiana, and Hawaii.


The ''Desert Cantos''

As Misrach's longest-running and most ambitious project, the ''Desert Cantos'', an ongoing series of photographs of deserts, may be considered the photographer's
magnum opus A masterpiece, , or ; ; ) is a creation that has been given much critical praise, especially one that is considered the greatest work of a person's career or a work of outstanding creativity, skill, profundity, or workmanship. Historically, ...
.Badger, Gerry.
In Photographica Deserta – The Desert Cantos of Richard Misrach
" ''Creative Camera'', 1988.
Begun in 1979 with a Deardorff 8×10"
view camera A view camera is a large format, large-format camera in which the large format lens, lens forms an erect image, inverted image on a ground glass, ground-glass screen directly at the film plane. The image is viewed, composed, and focused, then the ...
, the series is ongoing and numbers 42 cantos as of 2022.Misrach, Richard, and Kate Orff. ''Petrochemical America''. Aperture, NY 2012. Misrach's use of the term " canto" was inspired in part by the cantos of
Ezra Pound Ezra Weston Loomis Pound (30 October 1885 – 1 November 1972) was an List of poets from the United States, American poet and critic, a major figure in the early modernist poetry movement, and a Collaboration with Nazi Germany and Fascist Ita ...
; in a 1989 article in '' Creative Camera'', Gerry Badger elaborates:
The Italian term "canto" was used to denote that the vast enterprise has been broken down into individual thematic essays or "cantos," which together make up the whole work, or "song cycle." Some of these cantos consist of only a few images, while others run into hundreds. Some may be regarded as "
documentary A documentary film (often described simply as a documentary) is a nonfiction Film, motion picture intended to "document reality, primarily for instruction, education or maintaining a Recorded history, historical record". The American author and ...
" in mode, some more metaphorical. Some may be considered aesthetic in intent, some "political" – though as an ambitious and intelligent photographer, aesthetics are never pursued at the expense of politics, or vice versa. Misrach's goal may be said to be a search for the photographic Holy Grail, to fuse reportage with poetry. To progress – as he put it – "from the descriptive and the informative to a metaphorical resolution."
A 2013 review in ''
Architectural Digest ''Architectural Digest'' (stylized in all caps) is an American monthly magazine founded in 1920. Its principal subjects are interior design and landscaping, rather than pure external architecture. The magazine is published by Condé Nast ...
'' compares Misrach's desert images to the work of " Carleton Watkins, Timothy O'Sullivan, and other 19th-century itinerant photographers," noting that while "sublimely beautiful, Misrach's prints are also imbued with disquieting undercurrents."Pollack, Barbara.
Richard Misrach's Monumental Photographs
" Architectural Digest, April 2013.
Beginning with "The Terrain," in which images of apparently untouched wilderness are punctuated by human elements such as a lone telephone pole or a train, the ''Cantos'' include spectacles like the space shuttle landing ("The Event") and car racing ("The Salt Flats"), man-made fires and floods like the
Salton Sea The Salton Sea is a shallow, landlocked, highly salinity, saline endorheic lake in Riverside County, California, Riverside and Imperial County, California, Imperial counties in Southern California. It lies on the San Andreas Fault within the S ...
("The Flood") and desert seas created by the damming of rivers, as well as color-field studies of empty skies ("The Skies"). Images of military training and testing sites feature extensively in the ''Cantos'' and the series' corresponding publications: "The War" resulted in the 1991 book ''Bravo 20: The Bombing of the American West'', co-authored by Myriam Weisang Misrach, and nuclear testing was addressed in ''Violent Legacies'', published in 1992. "The Pit" documented
mass graves A mass grave is a grave containing multiple human corpses, which may or may Unidentified decedent, not be identified prior to burial. The United Nations has defined a criminal mass grave as a burial site containing three or more victims of exec ...
of dead animals in the
Nevada Nevada ( ; ) is a landlocked state in the Western United States. It borders Oregon to the northwest, Idaho to the northeast, California to the west, Arizona to the southeast, and Utah to the east. Nevada is the seventh-most extensive, th ...
desert while "Pictures of Paintings" focused on the representation of the western
landscape A landscape is the visible features of an area of land, its landforms, and how they integrate with natural or human-made features, often considered in terms of their aesthetic appeal.''New Oxford American Dictionary''. A landscape includes th ...
in museums across the American West. "The Playboys" depicted issues of ''
Playboy ''Playboy'' (stylized in all caps) is an American men's Lifestyle journalism, lifestyle and entertainment magazine, available both online and in print. It was founded in Chicago in 1953 by Hugh Hefner and his associates, funded in part by a $ ...
'', discovered by the photographer at a military site, that had been used for
target practice Target practice is a key part of both military training and shooting sports. It involves exercises where people shoot weapons at specific targets. The main goal is to improve the shooter's accuracy and skill with firearms. Through repeated pra ...
. Badger suggests that Misrach's ''Cantos'' have an antecedent in the work of Depression-era documentary photographer
Lewis Hine Lewis Wickes Hine (September 26, 1874 – November 3, 1940) was an American sociologist and muckraker photographer. His photographs taken during times such as the Progressive Era and the Great Depression captured young children working in harsh ...
, writing that with the ''Cantos'', Misrach
...has attempted a project of immense ambition – possibly one of the most ambitious in the history of the medium – compounded of many ideas, existing on different levels, and subject to profound shifts in subject and mood. He must be judged on the ''Desert Cantos'' as a totality, the sum rather than the individual parts... I regard the ''Desert Cantos'' as one of the most important photographic enterprises of the nineteen-eighties and nineties.
The ''
Los Angeles Times The ''Los Angeles Times'' is an American Newspaper#Daily, daily newspaper that began publishing in Los Angeles, California, in 1881. Based in the Greater Los Angeles city of El Segundo, California, El Segundo since 2018, it is the List of new ...
'' quotes Misrach regarding the ''Cantos'':
The desert ... may serve better as the backdrop for the problematic relationship between man and the environment. The human struggle, the successes ... both noble and foolish, are readily apparent in the desert. Symbols and relationships seem to arise that stand for the human condition itself.


''Desert Canto XXXVIII: Premonitions'' (2009-2016) and ''Desert Canto XXXIX: The Writing On the Wall'' (2017-)

In one of the most recent ''Desert Cantos,'' Misrach examines a polarizing and anxious moment in American history, using both a large-format digital camera and his iPhone to document graffiti left on abandoned buildings and rock walls throughout Southern California and the greater Southwest. ''Desert Canto XXXVIII: Premonitions'' (2009-2016) suggests a disturbing and dystopian climate which "in hindsight...led to the Trump election" while ''Desert Canto XXXIX: The Writing On the Wall'' (2017-), photographed after the 2016 election, captures an "election-engendered dialogue in graffiti form."


''Desert Canto LV: Art in the West''

As part of Misrach‘s exploration of land art in the desert, he photographed Nancy Holt's Sun Tunnels in 1988. That work is part of a 2022 traveling exhibition, Nancy Holt/ Inside Outside, and was published in a Blind Spot monograph.


The Oakland–Berkeley fire and Hurricane Katrina

In October 1991, a
firestorm A firestorm is a conflagration which attains such intensity that it creates and sustains its own wind system. It is most commonly a natural phenomenon, created during some of the largest bushfires and wildfires. Although the term has been used ...
raged in the Oakland–Berkeley hills, killing 25 people, wounding 150 and destroying over 3,500 dwellings. This fire – one of the worst in California's history – happened a few miles from Misrach's studio and the photographer visited the site a few weeks later, taking hundreds of pictures. However, out of respect for the victims of the fire, he put the work away for two decades. "1991: The Oakland–Berkeley Fire Aftermath: Photographs by Richard Misrach," an exhibition of Misrach's photographs of the firestorm's aftermath, was finally shown for the first time concurrently by the Berkeley Art Museum and the
Oakland Museum of California Oakland is a city in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area in the U.S. state of California. It is the county seat and most populous city in Alameda County, California, Alameda County, with a population of 440,646 in 2020. A major We ...
in 2011. These exhibits included handcrafted elegy books in which visitors shared their recollections, a video story booth for recording memories, and an open-microphone meetings. The collected responses from local residents, as well as the prints — sets of which Misrach donated to the museums — were kept in the collections.Artist biography, Fraenkel Gallery
San Francisco, CA.
To date, the majority of Misrach's large-format documentary images of
New Orleans New Orleans (commonly known as NOLA or The Big Easy among other nicknames) is a Consolidated city-county, consolidated city-parish located along the Mississippi River in the U.S. state of Louisiana. With a population of 383,997 at the 2020 ...
and the Gulf Coast taken immediately after
Hurricane Katrina Hurricane Katrina was a powerful, devastating and historic tropical cyclone that caused 1,392 fatalities and damages estimated at $125 billion in late August 2005, particularly in the city of New Orleans and its surrounding area. ...
have not been shown, with the exception of ''Destroy this Memory'', a book published five years after the disaster, consisting entirely of pocket-camera pictures of messages left on houses, cars, and trees by survivors of the hurricane. A ''Los Angeles Times'' review called the book "a raw testament, shot between October and December 2005, just after the waters began to recede but the emotions had certainly not. Without captions or a contextual introduction to detract from the potency of the photographs themselves, the book is a powerful document allowing survivors to speak eloquently for themselves — even in absentia." Proceeds from ''Destroy this Memory'' were donated to the Make It Right Foundation to help rebuild the city's Lower Ninth Ward. Complete sets of the photographs were also donated to five museums—the
Museum of Modern Art The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, on 53rd Street (Manhattan), 53rd Street between Fifth Avenue, Fifth and Sixth Avenues. MoMA's collection spans the late 19th century to the present, a ...
, the
National Gallery of Art The National Gallery of Art is an art museum in Washington, D.C., United States, located on the National Mall, between 3rd and 9th Streets, at Constitution Avenue NW. Open to the public and free of charge, the museum was privately established in ...
, the
New Orleans Museum of Art The New Orleans Museum of Art (or NOMA) is the oldest art museum, fine arts museum in the city of New Orleans, Louisiana, New Orleans. It is situated within City Park (New Orleans), City Park, a short distance from the intersection of Carrollton ...
, the Houston Museum of Fine Arts and the
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) is a modern art, modern and contemporary art museum and nonprofit organization located in San Francisco, California. SFMOMA was the first museum on the West Coast devoted solely to 20th-century art ...
.Misrach, Richard. ''Destroy this Memory''. Aperture, New York, 2010.


Golden Gate Bridge and ''Petrochemical America''

When Misrach moved to a house in the Berkeley hills in 1997, he was inspired by the spectacle of weather and light surrounding the
Golden Gate Bridge The Golden Gate Bridge is a suspension bridge spanning the Golden Gate, the strait connecting San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Ocean in California, United States. The structure links San Francisco—the northern tip of the San Francisco Peni ...
, which sat only seven miles from his front porch. For four years he photographed the bridge from the same location and with the same vantage point under different climate conditions.Gallagher, Lauren.
Richard Misrach's Golden Gate Dreams
" ''San Francisco Examiner'', August 5, 2013.
Concurrently, Misrach was working in Louisiana, following a commission he received from the
High Museum of Art The High Museum of Art (colloquially the High) is the largest museum for visual art in the Southeastern United States. Located in Atlanta, Georgia (on Peachtree Street in Midtown, the city's arts district), the High is 312,000 square feet (28, ...
in Atlanta. In 1998, he began documenting " Cancer Alley," a stretch along the
Mississippi River The Mississippi River is the main stem, primary river of the largest drainage basin in the United States. It is the second-longest river in the United States, behind only the Missouri River, Missouri. From its traditional source of Lake Ita ...
between
Baton Rouge Baton Rouge ( ; , ) is the List of capitals in the United States, capital city of the U.S. state of Louisiana. It had a population of 227,470 at the 2020 United States census, making it List of municipalities in Louisiana, Louisiana's second-m ...
and New Orleans that is home to over 135 manufacturing plants and refineries. The resulting images were exhibited as part of the "Picturing the South" series at the High Museum. He resumed photographing the area in 2010 and completed the series in 2012 with another exhibition at the High Museum, "Revisiting the South," and the publication of'' Petrochemical America'', a book pairing Misrach's images with an "ecological atlas" by architect and
Columbia University Columbia University in the City of New York, commonly referred to as Columbia University, is a Private university, private Ivy League research university in New York City. Established in 1754 as King's College on the grounds of Trinity Churc ...
professor Kate Orff. Orff's writing and infographic-style work in the book articulate the complex industrial, economic, ecological, and historical problems that inevitably gave rise to the places featured in Misrach's photographs. A wall-sized image of contaminated wasteland depicting "Cancer Alley" was featured in "Picturing the South: 25 Years", on view at the High Museum of Art in 2021.


''On the Beach'' and ''On the Beach 2.0''

In January 2002, following an exploratory trip in November 2001, Misrach started his ''On the Beach'' project, consisting of serial photographs taken from the same building overlooking a beach in Hawaii. The project's title refers to the
Cold War The Cold War was a period of global Geopolitics, geopolitical rivalry between the United States (US) and the Soviet Union (USSR) and their respective allies, the capitalist Western Bloc and communist Eastern Bloc, which lasted from 1947 unt ...
-era Nevil Shute book and subsequent 1959 sci-fi movie, '' On the Beach'', in which survivors in Australia await an oncoming nuclear fallout. According to ''Smithsonian'' magazine, the series was "deeply influenced by the events of
September 11, 2001 The September 11 attacks, also known as 9/11, were four coordinated Islamist terrorist suicide attacks by al-Qaeda against the United States in 2001. Nineteen terrorists hijacked four commercial airliners, crashing the first two into ...
;" the aerial perspectives of figures suspended in the ocean or on the beach reminded Misrach of news photographs of people falling from the twin towers.Fletcher, Kenneth R.
Richard Misrach's Ominous Beach Photographs
" ''Smithsonian'' magazine, August 2008.
The resulting photographs were very large: ''Smithsonian'' reports that "the largest measure six by ten feet and are so detailed you can read the headlines on a beachgoer's newspaper." The beach images "seem much more beautiful, almost in a way more soft than some of his other work," writes Sarah Greenough, photography curator at the
National Gallery of Art The National Gallery of Art is an art museum in Washington, D.C., United States, located on the National Mall, between 3rd and 9th Streets, at Constitution Avenue NW. Open to the public and free of charge, the museum was privately established in ...
: "After you look at them for a while, though, they are hardly soft at all. There really is something very ominous going on." Misrach also captured people in action – a man tossing a woman through the air or someone doing a headstand in the water – which was especially noteworthy given the time-consuming and cumbersome
view camera A view camera is a large format, large-format camera in which the large format lens, lens forms an erect image, inverted image on a ground glass, ground-glass screen directly at the film plane. The image is viewed, composed, and focused, then the ...
used. The photographer has said that the work is of a piece with his usual focus on humanity and the environment, but "it is much more about our relationship to the bigger, sublime picture of things." Misrach completed the series in 2005 and went on to publish a large-format book called ''On the Beach'' in 2007, voted by
Photo District News ''Photo District News'' (or ''PDN'') was an American monthly trade journal, trade publication for professional photographers, published from 1980 to January 2020. The publication took its name from New York City's photo district, an area of photo ...
readers as one of the most influential books of the decade. Returning to the same beach while on vacation in late 2011 with a new digital camera, he began working at the same location but with a different intent and mood: the artist says he was becoming "more comfortable with
metaphysical Metaphysics is the branch of philosophy that examines the basic structure of reality. It is traditionally seen as the study of mind-independent features of the world, but some theorists view it as an inquiry into the conceptual framework of h ...
questions," and the subjects of his 2011 images appear at play and in harmony with nature. The title of the series, ''On the Beach 2.0'', alludes to the fact that the photographs are grounded in their technological moment in time – as do the individual titles, which refer to the date and exact minute of each shot.Kirkland, Allegra.
Change Over Time: Richard Misrach at Pace MacGill
" DailyServing.com, June 6, 2013.
Conversely, reviewer Allegra Kirkland points out that parts of this body of work are the closest Misrach has come to traditional portraiture since ''Telegraph 3 AM''. The use of a digital camera and a
telephoto lens A telephoto lens, also known as telelens, is a specific type of a long-focus lens used in photography and cinematography, in which the physical length of the lens is shorter than the focal length. This is achieved by incorporating a special lens ...
introduced a new degree of speed and proximity to the artist's shooting methods; although faces are often obscured by a towel or magazine, many of the images in ''On The Beach 2.0'' might still be considered gestural portraits. Kirkland writes: "The 'On The Beach 2.0''series is about waiting and what happens when you do—the strange, small, secret moments that compose life... Ten years after the debut of the original project, Misrach seems to be affirming that man and nature do not always have to exist in opposition."


Reverse photographs and iPhone images

Recently, as an homage to the end of the analog era, Misrach has created a number of reverse images, essentially presenting large prints in their negative form: "The colors are reversed when output as pigment prints, making the photographs chromatic negatives... With his new work, Misrach appears determined to renew that sense of unfamiliarity—to revive the idea that color is unreliable, artificial." (''Art in America'')Princenthal, Nancy
"Richard Misrach,"
''Art in America'', April 26, 2010.
While making enormous large-scale prints, Misrach has also been experimenting with the relatively miniature, contemporary medium of cell phone photography; an exhibit of this work was shown in 2011, consisting entirely of small-scale color prints taken with an
iPhone The iPhone is a line of smartphones developed and marketed by Apple that run iOS, the company's own mobile operating system. The first-generation iPhone was announced by then–Apple CEO and co-founder Steve Jobs on January 9, 2007, at ...
camera. Misrach "continues his examination of man's interaction with land and seascapes in these intimate and experimental images, hereinthe artist revisits Bombay Beach, California, a flood zone where he hotographed found objects and
detritus In biology, detritus ( or ) is organic matter made up of the decomposition, decomposing remains of organisms and plants, and also of feces. Detritus usually hosts communities of microorganisms that colonize and decomposition, decompose (Reminera ...
– evidence of man's presence in the landscape. These compositions were also manipulated: positive becomes negative and objects are transformed in a reversed
color spectrum The visible spectrum is the band of the electromagnetic spectrum that is visible to the human eye. Electromagnetic radiation in this range of wavelengths is called ''visible light'' (or simply light). The optical spectrum is sometimes consider ...
." In 2022, ''Notations'', a large monograph of these experimental color reverse photographs was published by Radius Books.


Border Cantos

Misrach's ''Border Cantos'' series comprises photographs of the border between the U.S. and Mexico taken since 2004, and most extensively since 2009. In 2012 he began a collaboration with composer Guillermo Galindo, who manufactures playable instruments from objects found along the border. Misrach and Galindo have recovered artifacts from the border zone including water bottles, clothing, back-packs, Border Patrol "drag" tires, spent shotgun shells, ladders, and sections of the border wall itself, all of which have been transformed by Galindo into instrumental sculptures. The pair have produced the book ''Border Cantos'' (Aperture, 2016) and a museum exhibition that traveled to the San Jose Museum of Art, the Amon Carter Museum of Art, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, and Pace/PaceMacGill Gallery in New York (2016-2017). Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art has since acquired a number of pieces for their permanent collection and they are now traveling these pieces in an exhibit they call ''Border Cantos , Sonic Border''. This exhibit has been traveling since 2018 and has gone to over a dozen museums such as the Amarillo Museum of art, the Missoula Art Museum, the Westmoreland Museum of American Art and the Figge Art Museum.


UCSF Nancy Friend Pritzker Psychiatry Building

In 2019, Misrach was commissioned to produce all the art for a new UCSF psychiatry building in San Francisco. Mining his own archive of photographs, he produced over 120 works for the building which opened in fall 2022.


Alonzo King LINES Ballet

“Let Not Your Heart Be Troubled,” a collaboration between Alonzo King LINES Ballet, Grammy-winning singer Lisa Fisher and Misrach, had its world premiere in April 2023 in San Francisco before starting a traveling tour.


Awards

Misrach's book ''Desert Cantos'' received the 1988 Infinity Award from the International Center for Photography, and his ''Bravo 20: The Bombing of the American West'', co-authored with Myriam Weisang Misrach, was awarded the 1991 PEN Center West Award for a nonfiction book. His Katrina monograph ''Destroy This Memory'' won Best Photobook of the Year 2011 at PhotoEspaña.Artist biography
Aperture website.
He has received four
National Endowment for the Arts The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) is an independent agency of the United States federal government that offers support and funding for projects exhibiting artistic excellence. It was created in 1965 as an independent agency of the feder ...
Fellowships, a
Guggenheim Fellowship Guggenheim Fellowships are Grant (money), grants that have been awarded annually since by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, endowed by the late Simon Guggenheim, Simon and Olga Hirsh Guggenheim. These awards are bestowed upon indiv ...
, an International Center of Photography Infinity Award for a Publication, and the Distinguished Career in Photography Award from the Los Angeles Center for Photographic Studies. In 2002 he was given the Kulturpreis for Lifetime Achievement in Photography by the German Society for Photography, and in 2008 he received the Lucie Award for Outstanding Achievement in Fine Art Photography.


Commissions

In 2010,
Apple An apple is a round, edible fruit produced by an apple tree (''Malus'' spp.). Fruit trees of the orchard or domestic apple (''Malus domestica''), the most widely grown in the genus, are agriculture, cultivated worldwide. The tree originated ...
licensed Misrach's 2004 image ''Pyramid Lake (at Night)'' as the inaugural wallpaper for the first
iPad The iPad is a brand of tablet computers developed and marketed by Apple Inc., Apple that run the company's mobile operating systems iOS and later iPadOS. The IPad (1st generation), first-generation iPad was introduced on January 27, 2010. ...
. The opening credits of the 2014
HBO Home Box Office (HBO) is an American pay television service, which is the flagship property of namesake parent-subsidiary Home Box Office, Inc., itself a unit owned by Warner Bros. Discovery. The overall Home Box Office business unit is based a ...
series ''
True Detective ''True Detective'' is an American Anthology series, anthology Crime fiction, crime Drama (film and television), drama television series created by Nic Pizzolatto for the premium cable network HBO. The series premiered on January 12, 2014, and ...
'' featured a montage of images from Misrach's ''Petrochemical America''. In 2016, the AIGA selected ''Border Cantos'' for its "50 Books , 50 Covers" competition, a "survey of the best in book design represent ngperhaps the longest-standing legacy in American graphic design."


Personal life

Misrach has been married since 1989 to writer Myriam Weisang and has a son, Jake, from his first marriage to Debra Bloomfield.


Publications

* ''Telegraph 3 A.M.: The Street People of Telegraph Avenue, Berkeley'', Cornucopia Press, Berkeley, CA, 1974 * ''(untitled photographic book)'', Grapestake Gallery, San Francisco, CA, 1979 * ''Desert Cantos'', University of New Mexico Press, Santa Fe, NM, 1987 (first and second editions) ** ''Desert Cantos'' (Japanese edition), Treville Corporation Ltd., 1987 ** ''Desert Cantos'', University of New Mexico Press, Santa Fe, NM, 1988 (third edition) * ''Richard Misrach: 1975-1987'', Gallery Min, Tokyo. 1988 * ''Bravo 20: The Bombing of the American West'' (with Myriam Weisang Misrach), Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD, 1990 * ''Violent Legacies: Three Cantos'' (with fiction by Susan Sontag), Aperture, New York City, 1992 ** ''Violent Legacies: Three Cantos'' (with fiction by Susan Sontag), Aperture, New York City, 1994 (softcover edition) * ''Crimes and Splendors: The Desert Cantos of Richard Misrach'', Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX, 1996 * ''Cantos del Desierto'', Diputacion de Granada, Granada, Spain, 1999 * ''The Sky Book'', Arena, Santa Fe, NM, 2000 * ''Richard Misrach: Golden Gate'', Arena, Santa Fe, NM, 2001 ** ''Richard Misrach: Golden Gate'', Aperture, New York City, 2005 (second edition) ** ''Richard Misrach: Golden Gate'', Aperture, New York City, 2013 '' ''(third edition) * ''Pictures of Paintings'', Blind Spot/Powerhouse, 2002 * ''Richard Misrach: Chronologies'', Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco, CA, 2005 * ''Richard Misrach: On The Beach'', Aperture, New York City, 2007 * ''Destroy This Memory'', Aperture, New York City, 2010 * ''1991'', Blind Spot/Powerhouse, 2011 * ''Petrochemical America ''(with Kate Orff), Aperture, New York City, 2012 ** ''Petrochemical America'' (with Kate Orff), Aperture, New York City, 2014 (paperback edition) * ''11.21.11 5:40pm'', Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco, CA, 2013 * ''iPhone Studies: Reverse Scrubs'',
Nazraeli Press Nazraeli Press is a publisher of books of photography. It was founded in 1989, in Munich, Germany, by Chris Pichler and has been based in the US since 1996. Nazraeli publishes roughly 30 new titles each year and has published over 400 with work b ...
(One Picture Book No. 82), Portland, OR, 2013 * ''Misrach'', Nazraeli Press (Six by Six), Portland, OR, 2014 * ''Assignment No 2'' (Michael Nelson with Richard Misrach and Hiroshi Sugimoto), TBW, Oakland, CA, 2014 * ''The Mysterious Opacity of Other Beings'', Aperture, New York City, 2015 * ''Photographers' References: Richard Misrach'', Photographers' References, Paris, France, 2016 *''Border Cantos'' by Richard Misrach and Guillermo Galindo; with an introduction and texts by
Josh Kun Josh Kun is an American author, academic and music critic. Kun is Professor of Communication and Journalism and chair in Cross-Cultural Communication in the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism, Annenberg School at the University ...
. Aperture, New York City, 2016 *''Richard Misrach On Landscape and Meaning'', Aperture, New York, 2021 *''Richard Misrach: Notations'', Radius, 2022 *''Blind Spot Folios 001: Nancy Holt & Richard Misrach'', Blind Spot, New York, 2022


Selected anthologies and documentaries

* ''New American Photography'', Kathleen Gauss, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1985 * ''American Independents: Eighteen Color Photographers,'' ed. Sally Eauclaire. New York: Abbeville, 1987. . * ''American Visionaries: Selections from the Whitney Museum of American Art'', The Whitney Museum of American Art, Harry N. Abrams, 2002 * ''Visions from America: Photographs from the Whitney Museum of American Art, 1940-2001'', The Whitney Museum of American Art, Prestel, 2002 * Artbound , ''No Trespassing: A Survey of environmental art'', PBS, summer 2020 * Art21: ''Borderlands, Art in the Twenty-First Century'', Fall 2020 * Art21: ''Richard Misrach: Never the Same'', Spring 2022


Exhibitions

Misrach was part of the ''Mirrors and Windows'' exhibit, at the Museum of Modern Art in 1978. A solo show followed at the Musee d'Art Moderne, Beaubourg Center, Paris. He has been part of two
Whitney Biennial The Whitney Biennial is a biennial exhibition of contemporary American art organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City. The event began as an annual exhibition in 1932; the first biennial was held in 1973. It is considered ...
s, in 1981 and again in 1991. A major mid-career survey was organized by the Houston Museum of Fine Arts in 1996 and toured the United States; a smaller version appeared in Madrid and Bilbao, Spain. Beginning in 2007, the exhibit ''On the Beach'' traveled to museums nationwide, including the
Art Institute of Chicago The Art Institute of Chicago, founded in 1879, is one of the oldest and largest art museums in the United States. The museum is based in the Art Institute of Chicago Building in Chicago's Grant Park (Chicago), Grant Park. Its collection, stewa ...
, the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, and the National Gallery of Art. In 2012/13, Misrach's ''Cancer Alley'' work was on view at the High Museum of Art and the Cantor Center at
Stanford University Leland Stanford Junior University, commonly referred to as Stanford University, is a Private university, private research university in Stanford, California, United States. It was founded in 1885 by railroad magnate Leland Stanford (the eighth ...
, and was part of a traveling exhibition with Kate Orff. A selection of Misrach's series ''Telegraph 3AM'', the entirety of which is held in MoMA's collection, was on view as part of the exhibition ''Living in the City'', in 2021/22.


Collections

Misrach's work is held in the following public collections: *
Centre Pompidou The Centre Pompidou (), more fully the (), also known as the Pompidou Centre in English and colloquially as Beaubourg, is a building complex in Paris, France. It was designed in the style of high-tech architecture by the architectural team of ...
: 5 prints (as of October 2022) * Amon Carter Museum of American Art:12 prints (as of October 2022) *
Los Angeles County Museum of Art The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) is an art museum located on Wilshire Boulevard in the Miracle Mile vicinity of Los Angeles. LACMA is on Museum Row, adjacent to the La Brea Tar Pits (George C. Page Museum). LACMA was founded in 1961 ...
:21 prints (as of October 2022) *
Metropolitan Museum of Art The Metropolitan Museum of Art, colloquially referred to as the Met, is an Encyclopedic museum, encyclopedic art museum in New York City. By floor area, it is the List of largest museums, third-largest museum in the world and the List of larg ...
:7 prints (as of April 2019) *
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH), is an art museum located in the Houston Museum District of Houston, Texas. The permanent collection of the museum spans more than 5,000 years of history with nearly 80,000 works from six continents. Follo ...
:150 prints (as of October 2022) *
Museum of Modern Art The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, on 53rd Street (Manhattan), 53rd Street between Fifth Avenue, Fifth and Sixth Avenues. MoMA's collection spans the late 19th century to the present, a ...
, New York:101 prints (as of October 2022) *
National Gallery of Art The National Gallery of Art is an art museum in Washington, D.C., United States, located on the National Mall, between 3rd and 9th Streets, at Constitution Avenue NW. Open to the public and free of charge, the museum was privately established in ...
:151 prints (as of October 2022) *
Art Institute of Chicago The Art Institute of Chicago, founded in 1879, is one of the oldest and largest art museums in the United States. The museum is based in the Art Institute of Chicago Building in Chicago's Grant Park (Chicago), Grant Park. Its collection, stewa ...
:31 prints (as of October 2022) *
Whitney Museum of American Art The Whitney Museum of American Art, known informally as "The Whitney", is a Modern art, modern and Contemporary art, contemporary American art museum located in the Meatpacking District, Manhattan, Meatpacking District and West Village neighbor ...
:18 prints (as of April 2019) *
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) is a modern art, modern and contemporary art museum and nonprofit organization located in San Francisco, California. SFMOMA was the first museum on the West Coast devoted solely to 20th-century art ...
:85 prints (as of October 2022) * Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art:4 prints (as of October 2022) * North Carolina Museum of Art: 1 print (as of May 2023)


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Misrach, Richard Date of birth missing (living people) 1949 births 20th-century American male artists 20th-century American photographers 21st-century American male artists 21st-century American photographers Activists from Los Angeles Activists from the San Francisco Bay Area American environmentalists American fine art photographers Artists from the San Francisco Bay Area American landscape photographers Living people Photographers from Los Angeles University of California, Berkeley alumni