Ray Mortenson Explained

Ray Mortenson (born 1944) is a New York-based landscape photographer who has documented the metropolitan corridor of the US' northeastern landscape since the 1970s. From 1979-84, he made black and white photographs of the industrial tidal marshes in the New Jersey Meadowlands and abandoned buildings in The Bronx.[1] Mortenson's work has been widely exhibited since the 1980s and is held in the permanent collections of over forty institutions in the US, Canada, France and Japan.

In addition to his book Meadowland, published in 1983 by Lustrum Press, Mortenson has produced many one of a kind hand-bound books from his photographic prints.[2]

Life and career

Ray Mortenson was born in Wilmington, DE. He attended Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, PA (Department of Painting, Design & Sculpture, 1963–1965) and pursued sculpture at San Francisco Art Institute, CA (1966–1968). In 1968, Mortenson moved to New York City and he continues to live and work downtown.

In 1974, he began working in photography and is self-taught. He started to exhibit his work in the early 1980s and has since participated in exhibitions in Austria, Canada and throughout the United States. His work is held in more than forty institutional collections in the US, Canada, France and Japan.

Work

Ray Mortenson uses a wide variety of camera formats, photographic processes, and print sizes.

In the early 1980s, he made black and white photographs of the industrial tidal marshes in the New Jersey Meadowlands and abandoned buildings in The Bronx.[1] [3] Studying isolated areas bordering urban centers, he has documented particular features of locations in Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey, and Delaware.

A skilled darkroom (analog) printer, Mortenson produces photographs in sizes ranging from intimately scaled contact prints to 1:1 multi-paneled mural sized pieces.[4] He prints both silver (including ferrotyped) and platinum.

Mortenson's major projects include: Meadowland (1978–1983), South Bronx (1982–1984), Northeast Landscape (1990–1998), Conanicut, Rhode Island (1998–2005), Meadowland Journal (2000–2010), and New York City (2008–2021).[5] Within each project are smaller categories.

Publications

Exhibitions

Collections

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

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Crumbling South Bronx as a Muse. 30 November 2008 . 3 September 2016 . Randy . Kennedy . .
  2. Web site: "hand made books".
  3. https://www.newyorker.com/goings-on-about-town/a-glorious-bewilderment-10-16-23
  4. Web site: ARTISTS. L. Parker Stephenson.
  5. Web site: Ray Mortenson . 2023-10-13 . The New Yorker . en.
  6. Web site: Archive.
  7. Web site: Broken Glass.
  8. Web site: Urban Legends.
  9. Web site: Big Show. NYTimes.
  10. Web site: Pastoral. NYTimes.
  11. Web site: Land Through the Lens. Smithsonian.
  12. Web site: Broken Glass exhibition. MCNY.
  13. Web site: Books in DIY: Photographers & Books. 16 January 2013. Cleveland Museum of Art.
  14. Web site: All That Glitters. CCP.
  15. Web site: Analog Culture. Harvard Art Museums.
  16. Web site: The Human Environment. Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL.
  17. Web site: Addison Gallery of American Art.
  18. News: Discover Art & Artists | The Art Institute of Chicago. The Art Institute of Chicago .
  19. Web site: Search. Canadian Centre for. Architecture (CCA). www.cca.qc.ca.
  20. Web site: Search the collection. CCP.
  21. Web site: Search the collection. Cleveland Museum of Art.
  22. Web site: Search the collection. Harvard Museums.
  23. Web site: Search the collection. George Eastman Museum.
  24. Web site: Search the collection. High Museum.
  25. Web site: https://collections.lacma.org/search/site/ray%2520mortenson?f[0=bm_field_has_image%3Atrue Search the collection]. LACMA.
  26. Web site: Search The collection. The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  27. Web site: Search the collection. 2023-10-13 . Minneapolis Institute of Art.
  28. Web site: Search the collection. collections.mcny.org.
  29. Web site: Search the collection. MFAH.