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Catalogue Raisonne 1978-2004.
Photographs by Jeff Wall. Edited by Theodora Vischer and Heidi Naef. Essay by Jean-Francois Chevrier.
Steidl / Schaulager,
Gottingen,
2005.
500 pp.,
120 color and 92 duotone illustrations,
9¾x11¾".
In tandem with a major retrospective exhibition that
opened in April at Schaulager Basel in Switzerland, and
currently showing at the Tate Modern in London, there are
at least three new book titles out that showcase the photographic
work of Jeff Wall. In scope and detail, Jeff Wall:
Catalogue Raisonné 1978–2004 is by far the most comprehensive
and systematic collection of Wall’s
distinct photographs and writings. This is a monster of a
book, with nearly 500 pages. Since 1978, Wall has created
about 120 images, and all of them are presented here in
chronological order. This format enables the viewer to see
both the evolution of his ideas and the consistency of his
approach throughout the last 25 years, starting with his
first large-scale light-box transparency The Destroyed
Room, 1978 and ending with A view from an apartment,
2004–05. With his staged “snapshots” of primarily urban
life, he creates a credible world that blurs the line between
staged and documentary photography. Half of the book is
dedicated to just the images themselves, and the other
half consists of explanatory notes on each photograph,
four short essays by Jeff Wall, pages of exhibition history
and an indispensable bibliography of literature by and
about Jeff Wall. The extensive annotations on each image
include year, medium, size, edition, owner or collection,
featured exhibitions, noted texts, technical notes and general
insight into the piece. This meticulously researched
book is the definitive source on Jeff Wall. - LARISSA LECLAIR
Read Publisher's Description.
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