5/31


I had the chance to see Gene Smith's 'Jazz Loft Project' show a few weeks back and I must say I keep returning to it in my mind. It's the kind of photography that was dismissed out of hand in graduate school (it's black and white, old and thoroughly NOT postmodern), but the kind of work that has inspired me since I picked up a camera.

It's an incredible, if somewhat obsessive (as only Gene Smith can be), document of the loft building in NYC where Smith lived in from 1957-1965. He not only photographed the life within the building, (where musicians came to jam after gigs and parties lasted all night) but what he saw on the street as he looked out his windows. And from the enormous output, Smith photographed EVERYTHING.

1,447 rolls of film and about 40,000 pictures comprise this document, but perhaps the most interesting part of it had nothing to do with actual photographs. Smith also managed to wire the building for sound and record (via 1,740 reel to reel tapes) everything that took place within it. Included in this incredible collection is Thelonious Monk rehearsing for his legendary appearances at Lincoln Center and other various jam sessions, but also lots of things he taped off of the radio (plays, news programs, a World Series baseball game).

The exhibit displays the photographs and recordings in equal measure, which allows the viewer to completely immerse themselves in Smith's world. You get the chance to look at photographs and then listen to numerous recordings. The Monk rehearsals are breathtaking. There are also films of Smith discussing his work and various musicians talking about their experiences in the loft building during this time. It's an incredible document of a time and place that no longer exists; one that would have been lost if not for Smith's obsessive recording of everything around him.

Overall, it's one of the best shows I've seen in years and once again confirms Gene Smith's place as one of the most important documentarians in the history of photography.

No comments: