2011
111.0 x 84.0 cmImpressão giclée ou em tela de qualidade de museu, com produção rápida e opções flexíveis de acabamento. ( Comprar pintura feita à mão
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In the contemporary landscape of photography, few artists navigate the boundary between the commercial and the sublime as masterfully as Roe Ethridge. Born in Miami in 1969 and raised in the Atlanta area, Ethridge has cultivated a practice that challenges the very essence of what it means to capture reality. His work does not merely document the world; instead, it interrogates the plastic nature of the photographic medium itself—the way images can be endlessly replicated, manipulated, and recombined to forge entirely new visual experiences. Through his lens, the distinction between a high-fashion editorial and a fine art masterpiece dissolves, leaving behind a provocative exploration of how we consume and perceive imagery in an age of infinite reproduction.
Ethridge’s artistic journey is deeply rooted in a sophisticated understanding of both technical precision and conceptual subversion. After earning his BFA in photography from the Atlanta College of Art, he moved to New York City in 1997, a pivotal moment that launched his dual career in commercial and fine art photography. This duality became the cornerstone of his aesthetic. By working for prestigious publications such as New York Times Magazine, Allure, Spin, Vice, and Wired, he gained access to the visual language of mass media, which he would later deconstruct within the gallery space. His ability to create highly stylized versions of classical compositions—such as a hauntingly beautiful still life of moldy fruit that graced the cover of Vice magazine—demonstrates his talent for injecting surprising, often unsettling elements into familiar archetypes.
The significance of Ethridge’s work lies in his ability to act as a sculptor of reality. He often adopts images that have already been published, layering them with new, simulated textures to create a sense of hyper-reality. This process of appropriation and transformation allows him to explore themes of memory, artifice, and the malleability of truth. His portraits, landscapes, and still lifes are characterized by a serene yet subversive quality, often appearing tranquil at first glance only to reveal deeper, more complex layers of meaning upon closer inspection. As noted by critic James Lim in New York Magazine, Ethridge emerged as a recognizable force in the fine art world through this very ability to balance beauty with a quiet, unsettling tension.
The institutional recognition of his talent has been profound and widespread. His inclusion in the prestigious 2008 Whitney Biennial served as a landmark moment in his career, signaling his arrival as a major figure in contemporary photography. This momentum continued into 2010, when his work was featured in the Museum of Modern Art’s (MoMA) 25th-anniversary exhibition dedicated to new photography. The impact of his practice is perhaps most clearly seen in the esteemed collections that house his work, which include:
Influenced by the conceptual rigor of artists such as Thomas Ruff and Michael Schmidt, Ethridge continues to push the boundaries of the medium from his studio in Brooklyn. His work remains a vital touchstone for understanding the evolution of photography in the digital age, reminding us that the image is not a fixed window into the world, but a fluid, ever-changing construction of our collective perception.
1969 - , United States of America
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