Mary Frey Explained

Mary E. Frey (born 1948) is an American photographer and educator who lives in western Massachusetts.[1] [2] [3] Her staged scenes of mundane middle-class life, using family, friends and strangers, which appear to be documentary at first sight, are intended to address "the nature of the documentary image in contemporary culture."[4] [5] [6] [7] [8]

In 1984 Frey had a solo exhibition at the Hudson River Museum[9] and was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship.[10] Her work has been shown in group exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art in New York,[1] and held in the collection there and at the Art Institute of Chicago[11] and Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.[12]

Early life and education

Frey grew up in Yonkers, a borough of New York City.[13] She was the oldest of 6 children.[13]

She earned an MFA from Yale School of Art, Yale University in 1979.[3]

Photography

Frey makes staged scenes of mundane middle-class life, using family, friends and strangers, which appear to be documentary at first sight.[4] [5] [6] [8] She has said:

I was interested in how the best pictures create their own fictions, I considered all my subjects (whether they were friends or strangers) my "cast of characters" who were complicit in whatever I did. My working method was to set up my camera and either wait for something to happen or simply direct my subjects to recreate an action or moment, as if they were truly engaged in their activities… For me, the most interesting photographs hover somewhere between feeling documentary and set-up, thus questioning the inherent "truth" of the photographic image.[7]

The series Domestic Rituals is composed of black and white work made between 1979 and 1983 using a 4×5 large format camera and diffuse flashbulb lighting.[14] [15] Mark Steinmetz wrote in Time that these photographs "seem quite naturalistic, but are in part staged by the photographer, and she avoids the temptation to romanticize."[14] William Zimmer, reviewing an exhibition of Domestic Rituals in The New York Times, wrote that "how she captures [. . .] her large cast of characters [. . .] going about their lives without them being self-conscious in her presence, is the real marvel."[9] Originally made for gallery walls rather than for book format,[15] the work was published as Reading Raymond Carver in 2017. She has said:

My use of large format film insures the fact that every detail in a scene will be described with painful accuracy and the open flash I use illuminates these surfaces with a neutral, democratic light, so no detail takes precedence over another, giving everything in my scenes equal visual weight.[7]

Real Life Dramas is colour work in the same vein as her previous work, made between 1984 and 1987 using a medium format camera. Originally when exhibited, the images were paired with captions.[6] [13] The captions "come from the paperback romances that the women she photographs presumably read, and her choice of captions is invariably both apt and funny. [. . .] Though her witty texts seem appropriate to the pictures, they are actually ... [not] revealing of her subjects' actual thoughts".[5] When this work was published as a book in 2018, the strict pairings of text and image were abandoned, but the phrases still included throughout.[15] [7]

Educator

After her MFA, she accepted a full-time position teaching photography at Hartford Art School, University of Hartford, where she stayed for 35 years, retiring in 2015.[3] [13]

Publications

Awards

Collections

Frey's work is held in the following permanent collections:

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

Group exhibitions or exhibitions during festivals

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2021-04-23. Mary E. Frey. The Museum of Modern Art.
  2. News: Kenneth. Dickerman. Mary. Frey. 2021-04-23. Perspective: Nothing in these photographs is real. They are meant to 'hover somewhere between reality and soap opera.'. Washington Post. 0190-8286.
  3. Web site: 2021-04-23. Bio. Mary Frey.
  4. Web site: Carolyn. Robbins. 2021-04-23. Photographer Mary Frey to speak at Longmeadow library. 24 May 2019. masslive.
  5. News: Gene. Thornton. 2021-04-24. PHOTOGRAPHY VIEW; Beyond Narration. The New York Times. 14 December 1986. 0362-4331.
  6. News: Andy. Grundberg. 2021-04-24. PHOTOGRPAHY VIEW; A NEW BREED PUTS ITS OWN STAMP ON THE MEDIAN. The New York Times. 28 December 1986. 0362-4331.
  7. Web site: 2021-04-24. Spontaneous but fictional moments of the American life, by Mary Frey – Picto NY.
  8. Web site: 2021-04-28. Peperoni Books : Reading Raymond Carver. peperoni-books.de.
  9. News: William. Zimmer. 2021-04-24. ART ; PHOTOGRAPHY IN THREE SHOWS AT HUDSON MUSEUM. The New York Times. 26 August 1984. 0362-4331.
  10. Web site: 2021-04-23. Mary Frey. John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.
  11. Web site: 2021-04-23. Mary Frey. The Art Institute of Chicago.
  12. Web site: Works | Mary Frey | People | the MFAH Collections .
  13. Web site: 2021-04-24. Mary Frey - I'm The Narrator Of The Story. WÜL Magazine.
  14. 2021-04-23. Off the Radar: Mark Steinmetz on Nine Women Photographers of the Northeast. Time.
  15. Web site: 2021-04-23. Mary Frey: The States Project: Connecticut. 30 March 2018. lenscratch.com.
  16. News: 2021-04-23. GUGGENHEIM FOUNDATION AWARDS FELLOWSHIPS TO 283. The New York Times. 8 April 1984. 0362-4331.
  17. Web site: 2021-04-23. New Photography 2: Mary Frey, David Hanson, and Philip-Lorca diCorcia. The Museum of Modern Art.
  18. Web site: Sara. Knelman. 2021-04-24. The Terror and Pleasure of Staying at Home. 25 March 2020. Aperture.
  19. News: Holland. Cotter. 2021-04-24. A Gathering of Women With Cameras. The New York Times. 27 May 2010. 0362-4331.
  20. Web site: 2021-04-24. Biography Mary Frey. copenhagenphotofestival.com.
  21. Web site: 2021-04-24. Copenhagen Photo Festival 2019. metalmagazine.eu.