Alec Soth Explained

Alec Soth
Birth Place:Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
Alma Mater:Sarah Lawrence College
Occupation:Photography

Alec Soth (born 1969) is an American photographer, based in Minneapolis. Soth makes "large-scale American projects" featuring the midwestern United States. New York Times art critic Hilarie M. Sheets wrote that he has made a "photographic career out of finding chemistry with strangers" and photographs "loners and dreamers".[1] His work tends to focus on the "off-beat, hauntingly banal images of modern America" according to The Guardian art critic Hannah Booth. He is a member of Magnum Photos.

Soth has had various books of his work published by major publishers as well as self-published through his own Little Brown Mushroom.[2] His major publications are Sleeping by the Mississippi, Niagara, Broken Manual, Songbook, I Know How Furiously Your Heart Is Beating, and A Pound of Pictures.

He has received fellowships from the McKnight and Jerome Foundations, was the recipient of the 2003 Santa Fe Prize for Photography, and in 2021 received an Honorary Fellowship of the Royal Photographic Society.[3] His photographs are in the collections of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, and the Walker Art Center.[4] His work has been exhibited widely including as part of the 2004 Whitney Biennial and a major solo exhibition at Media Space in London in 2015.

Early life and education

Soth was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States. He studied at Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, New York. He was reported to be "painfully shy" in his youth.

Work

Photography

Soth liked the work of Diane Arbus. He traveled around the Mississippi River and made a self-printed book entitled Sleeping by the Mississippi which included both landscapes and portraits. Curators for the 2004 Whitney Biennial put him in their show, and one of his photographs entitled "Charles", of a man in a flight suit on his roof holding two model airplanes, was used in their poster.

Soth's work has since been compared to that of Walker Evans and Stephen Shore. He has photographed for The New York Times Magazine, Fortune and Newsweek.

When he photographs people, Soth feels nervous at times. He said: "My own awkwardness comforts people, I think. It's part of the exchange." When he was on the road, he'd have notes describing types of pictures he wanted taped to the steering wheel of his car. One list was: "beards, birdwatchers, mushroom hunters, men's retreats, after the rain, figures from behind, suitcases, tall people (especially skinny), targets, tents, treehouses and tree lines". With people, he'll ask their permission to photograph them, and often wait for them to get comfortable; he sometimes uses an 8x10 camera. He tries to find a "narrative arc and true storytelling" and pictures in which each picture will lead to the next one.

Soth has been photographing different parts of the US since his first book, Sleeping by the Mississippi, was published in 2004. His second book, Niagara, was published in 2006. One of his photos is of a woman in a bridal gown sitting outside what appears to be a motel; he describes having made an arrangement with a particular wedding chapel in Niagara Falls which let him take pictures of couples getting married, by photographing them after their weddings.[5]

Soth made several more photographic books including Last Days of W, a book about a country "exhausted by George W. Bush's presidency".

Soth spent the years between 2006 and 2010 exploring the idea of retreat.[6] Using the pseudonym Lester B. Morrison, he created Broken Manual over four years (2006–2010) an underground instruction manual for those looking to escape their lives. Soth investigates the places in which people retreat to escape civilization, he photographs monks, survivalists, hermits and runaways. He concurrently produced the photo book From Here to There: Alec Soth's America, an overview of Soth's photography from the early 1990s to the present.

In 2010, Soth flew to the United Kingdom but despite not having applied for a work visa was allowed into the country on the understanding that if he was "caught taking photographs" he could be put in prison for two years.[7] So he handed the camera to his young daughter who took pictures in Brighton.

A 2016 photo exhibition, titled Hypnagogia, featured 30 images from Soth's 20-year exploration of the state between wakefulness and sleep. "Described as a neurological phenomenon, one recurrently associated with creativity, a hypnagogic state is the dreamlike experience while awake that conjures vivid, sometimes realistic imagery," Soth explained in the artist statement for the project.[8]

Following a 2016 assignment on a laughter yoga workshop in India for The New York Times Magazine, Soth stopped working for a year.[9] During an art residency in San Francisco in 2017, later returned to his practice when the choreographer Anna Halprin, who was 97 at the time, invited him to photograph her at her home.[9]

Publishing

In 2010, Soth founded the publishing house, Little Brown Mushroom (LBM).[6] Through it, he publishes his own, and that of other like-minded people, "narrative photography books that function in a similar way to children's books," in book, magazine and newspaper formats.[10] He has collaborated on numerous books with Brad Zellar, a Minnesota writer from the Twin Cities.

Art market

In 2004, Soth became a nominee of the Magnum Photos agency and in 2008 became a full member. Early in his career, he was also taken up by Gagosian Gallery and is now represented by Sean Kelly Gallery in New York.[6]

Personal life

Soth lives with his wife Rachel Cartee and their children in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Publications

Books of work by Soth

Publications with others

Books edited or with contributions by Soth

Solo exhibitions

Collections

Soth's work is held in the following public collections:

Awards

Notes and References

  1. News: Hilarie m. sheets . Trolling for Strangers to Befriend . The New York Times . July 31, 2009 . 2010-12-28.
  2. Stuart. Brumfitt. 6 October 2015. Alec Soth: in the Pool of Images. I-D. London. Vice Media, Inc.. 16 November 2015. 21 October 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161021143107/http://i-d.vice.com/en_gb/article/alec-soth-in-the-pool-of-images. dead.
  3. Web site: 2022-01-07. The Royal Photographic Society Unveils its 2021 Award Winners. 26 October 2021. PetaPixel.
  4. News: Spotlight On Alec Soth At Minneapolis' Walker Art Center . Huffington Post. Sep 2, 2010 . 2010-12-28 . Nicole . Campoyleffler.
  5. News: Leo Benedictus, interviewing Alec Soth . Alec Soth's best shot . The Guardian . 7 December 2006 . 2010-12-28 . London.
  6. Liz Jobey (January 23, 2015), Alec Soth photographs an older, sadder and stranger America FT Magazine.
  7. News: Hannah Booth . The genius behind Alec Soth's Brighton biennial success . The Guardian . 19 September 2010 . 2010-12-28 . London.
  8. Web site: Mora. Luis. No Nonsense Advice from Alec Soth. Format Magazine. 19 September 2016.
  9. Jordan G. Teicher (February 28, 2019), A Year of Quiet Contemplation Led to the Rebirth of Alec Soth's Photography New York Times.
  10. News: How photographers joined the self-publishing revolution. 14 April 2013 . 9 June 2014 . Sean . O'Hagan . Sean O'Hagan (journalist) . .
  11. Web site: 2022-05-24. Book Review: 'Gathered Leaves' by Alec Soth. Musée Magazine.
  12. Web site: 2022-01-26. The big picture: Alec Soth's American road trip oddities. 9 January 2022. The Observer.
  13. Web site: Jacqui Palumbo. 2020-11-26. An inmate wrote to a famous photographer. Their letters, and friendship, became a collaborative project. CNN.
  14. Web site: 2020-11-26. 'A roadmap to redemption': how a photographer helped a prisoner see beyond his cage. 29 October 2020. The Guardian.
  15. Web site: How Does It Feel To Have Magnum Photographers Document Your Town?. 25 September 2015. 9 October 2018. Debbie Grossman. 9 September 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160909053755/http://www.americanphotomag.com/how-does-it-feel-to-have-magnum-photographers-document-your-town. dead.
  16. Web site: A Portrait of Rochester, New York, in 1,000 Photographs. 11 April 2016 . 9 October 2018. Gideon Jacobs.
  17. "Soth Bound", The New Yorker. Accessed 2 January 2015.
  18. Web site: Alec Soth: Niagara" Williams College Museum of Art . Wcma.williams.edu . 2013-10-20 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131102182005/http://wcma.williams.edu/exhibit/niagara/ . 2013-11-02 .
  19. Web site: Alec Soth: Black Line of Woods . Creative Loafing Atlanta . 2018-08-23.
  20. Web site: Triennale di Milano – Alec Soth – Mississippi Niagara . Triennale.it . 2010-03-21 . 2013-10-20 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131020173934/http://www.triennale.it/en/exhibitions/past/680-alec-soth-mississippi-niagara-2/ . 2013-10-20 . dead .
  21. Web site: From Here to There: Alec Soth's America . Walker Art Center . 2018-08-23 .
  22. Web site: Alec Soth . Multimedia Art Museum, Moscow | Exhibitions | Alec Soth – La Belle Dame sans Merci . Mamm-mdf.ru . 2013-10-20.
  23. Web site: Gathered Leaves: Photographs by Alec Soth . . 8 October 2015.
  24. News: Alec Soth: America's most immaculate, intriguing photographer. 7 October 2015 . 8 October 2015 . Sean . O'Hagan . Sean O'Hagan (journalist) . . London .
  25. News: Photographer Alec Soth: 'To me the most beautiful thing is vulnerability'. 26 September 2015 . 8 October 2015 . Mick . Brown . Mick Brown (journalist) . . London .
  26. Web site: 2018-06-12. Gathered Leaves. www.valokuvataiteenmuseo.fi.
  27. Web site: Alec Soth – Kunst Haus Wien. Museum Hundertwasser . 2022-12-12 . www.kunsthauswien.com.
  28. Web site: Alec Soth. The Art Institute of Chicago.
  29. Web site: 2018-06-13. Alec Soth. Museum of Contemporary Photography. 2018-06-14. https://web.archive.org/web/20180614021307/http://www.mocp.org/collection/mpp/soth_alec.php. dead.
  30. Web site: 2018-06-13. Alec Soth. Museum of Modern Art.
  31. Web site: 2018-06-12 . Collection - Pier 24 . Alec Soth . Pier 24 Photography.
  32. Web site: 2018-06-12 . Alec Soth . San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.
  33. Web site: 2018-06-13. Walker Art Center. Walker Art Center.
  34. Web site: 2018-06-13. Whitney Museum of American Art: Alec Soth. Whitney Museum of American Art.
  35. News: 2018-06-12. Meet the Fellows - McKnight Foundation. McKnight Foundation. 2018-06-12. https://web.archive.org/web/20180612153054/https://www.mcknight.org/programs/arts/the-mcknight-artist-fellowships/meet-the-fellows/?fellow-keyword=alec+soth&discipline=&fellow-year=&filter=true. dead.
  36. Web site: 2018-06-12. Alec Soth. www.jeromefdn.org. https://web.archive.org/web/20180612184447/https://www.jeromefdn.org/node/650696. 2018-06-12. dead.
  37. Web site: 2018-06-12. Jerome Fellowships Past Recipients. Minneapolis College of Art and Design.
  38. News: 2018-06-12. Santa Fe Prize - 2011 - CENTER. CENTER. 2017-11-15. https://web.archive.org/web/20171115182419/http://visitcenter.org/santa-fe-prize/. dead.
  39. Web site: 2018-06-12. CEPA Gallery's 9th Biennial Photography Auction. old.cepagallery.org.
  40. Web site: 2018-06-12. Deutsche Börse Photography Prize 2006. www.deutscheboersephotographyfoundation.org.
  41. Web site: 2018-06-12. Deutsche Borse photography prize 2006 index . The Guardian.
  42. News: 2018-06-12. Alec W. Soth. Bush Foundation.
  43. News: 2018-06-12. Bush Foundation announces its $100,000 and $50,000 grant recipients. MinnPost.
  44. Web site: Infinity Awards 2011. 16 March 2014 . .
  45. Web site: Guggenheim Fellowship. John Simon Guggenheim Foundation. 24 August 2015.
  46. News: 2018-06-12. McKnight announces 2013-14 photography, new media fellowships. Star Tribune.
  47. News: 2018-06-12. Finalists named in Knight Arts Challenge St. Paul; 'Wreck' at Guthrie's Dowling Studio. MinnPost.
  48. News: Euan. Kerr. 2018-06-12. Alec Soth finds humanity in social media, fleeting images. Minnesota Public Radio.
  49. Web site: 2018-06-12. Alec Soth / Little Brown Mushroom - Knight Foundation. John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.
  50. Web site: Hannah. Rooke. 2022-01-07. The Royal Photographic Society announces its 2021 award winners. 29 October 2021. digitalcameraworld.