When young Fred Herzog selected Kodachrome slide film in 1953 as his choice for making photographs, he did it for two reasons: the intensity of the color which suited his eye, and affordability. Kodachrome had marvelous aesthetic attributes, but also a major drawback. The only way to make color
prints with Kodachrome was to send the slide film to Kodak, an expensive and complicated process for even small prints, much less larger prints suitable for gallery display. But at age 23, Herzog didn't care. What he cared about was “making pictures.” So Herzog kept his images safely stored as slides, and continued to shoot, caring more about the image he created than the fact that slides were a dead-end to the gallery scene.
Now 85 years of age, the elder Herzog has lived long enough for technology to catch up to the Kodachrome dilemma and allow him to share his work. That technology — archival digital ink jet printing — has zoomed past Herzog's once dead-end Kodachrome slides for a new life. And that new life is beginning to explode within the connoisseurs and collectors of photography, thanks to Vancouver art dealer Andy Sylvester who was visionary enough to believe in him and exhibit his ink jet prints.
Read more about Fred Herzog's work
here in a comprehensive article by Timothy Taylor and see more of Herzog's images at the
Equinox Gallery in Vancouver.
All images © Fred Herzog
Man with Bandage
Ink Jet Print
20 x 29.5 in. image size
1968
Black Man Pender
Ink Jet Print
19 x 30 in. image size
1958
Rene's
Ink Jet Print
20 x 29.25 in. image size
1964
Victoria
Ink Jet Print
20 x 30 in. image size
1967
Red Stockings
Ink Jet Print
19 x 30 in. image size
1961
Bargain Shop
Ink Jet Print
20 x 24 in. image size
1962
Martin Luther King
Ink Jet Print
20 x 30 in. image size
1970
Curtains
Ink Jet Print
20 x 29.5 in. image size
1972
Salvage Ass’n
Ink Jet Print
20 x 29 in. image size
1958
Barber
Ink Jet Print
20 x 29.5 in. image size
1967
Two White Cars, Quebec City
Ink Jet Print
20 x 29.5 in. image size
1969
CN Bridge Main
Ink Jet Print
20 x 28 in. image size
1966
Boys on Shed
Ink Jet Print
20 x 28.5 in. image size
1962
Mexico City Shoe Shine
Ink Jet Print
20 x 29 in. image size
1963
Bogners Grocery
Ink Jet Print
19.5 x 30 in. image size
1960
Main Barber
Ink Jet Print
12 x 18 in. image size
1968
Isabella & Quilt
Ink Jet Print
20 x 29.5 in. image size
2000
Lucy/Georgia
Ink Jet Print
20 x 29.5 in. image size
1968
Crossing Powell
Ink Jet Print
30 x 20 in. image size
1984
Star Weekly
Ink Jet Print
20 x 29 in. image size
1965
Jackpot
Ink Jet Print
20 x 30 in. image size
1961
Canada Dry
Ink Jet Print
29.25 x 20 in. image size
1966
Diefenbaker
Ink Jet Print
20 x 29 in. image size
1962
Eisie and Dick
Ink Jet Print
20 x 29.25 in. image size
1974
Wild Animal
Ink Jet Print
20 x 24.5 in. image size
1960
Comments [5]
I particularly like Curtains, Lucy/Georgia and Wild Animal. The last is a wonderful picture.
And a general DO note and plea: this is so much better as a way to show bodies of photographs than slide shows, allowing much more rapid and effective comparisons to be made.
03.10.13
11:34
Can you confirm?
i would vote to support Mr Poynor's plea.
03.10.13
10:51
03.11.13
08:41
03.21.13
11:36
And I agree with Mr. Poynor: please continue to display images this way. DO's default slide show format is painfully clicky.
04.01.13
08:25