Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 11

Médéric Morel
Street Food Manhattan

2022

About the Item

Photographie disponible en deux formats : 40x60cm ou 50x75cm. Veuillez nous contacter si besoin. Jouant avec les codes et les clichés d’un pays où la fiction et la réalité se confondent largement, Médéric Morel nous fascine avec les couleurs de ses images. Trop belles pour être vraies ? Qui sait où est la vérité ? Face à cette diversité de regards et de propositions artistiques, ce sera à chacun d’inventer son histoire et de laisser flotter son imaginaire. Cette série a été réalisée lors d’un road trip le long de la route US 1 qui parcourt la côte Est des Etats-Unis. Les photos sont prises, le plus souvent le soir ou la nuit, et s’attachent à représenter des symboles de l’American way of life.
  • Creator:
    Médéric Morel (French)
  • Creation Year:
    2022
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 15.75 in (40 cm)Width: 23.63 in (60 cm)Depth: 0.04 in (1 mm)
  • More Editions & Sizes:
    édition 1/7Price: $385
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
  • Gallery Location:
    PARIS, FR
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU2073212495632
More From This SellerView All
  • August Palm Blues
    Located in PARIS, FR
    Ce tirage fait partie de la série " American Decorum " American Decorum Le grand rêve de l'Americana, cette culture américaine peuplée de symboles, de fétiches, de clichés auxquels ...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Landscape Photography

    Materials

    Pigment, Pigment

  • Ghosts of Chocolate Past
    Located in PARIS, FR
    "Photography teaches us the difference between looking for things & looking at them" - J.T. Une ondulation, une vague ou un reflet particulier de la lumière, qui donnent vie à des formes abstraites, des visages humains ou des hallucinations... C’est au travers des paréidolies – inclinaison du cerveau humain à rapprocher des formes aléatoires à des formes existantes – que sont fixées la beauté...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Abstract Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper, Pigment, Pigment

  • Blue Pet
    Located in PARIS, FR
    Ce tirage fait partie de l'exposition "Chasing Hallucinations". Il est aussi consultable dans le catalogue "Paréidolie" de La Galerie des Photographes. "Photography teaches us the ...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Abstract Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper, Pigment, Pigment

  • Presto
    Located in PARIS, FR
    Photographie disponible en deux formats : 45x90cm et 65x120cm Veuillez nous contacter si intéressé. Ce tirage fait partie de la série "Sacré Profane" C’est le cas de sa première émo...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Color Photography

    Materials

    Pigment

  • Agitato
    Located in PARIS, FR
    Photographie disponible en deux formats : 45x90cm et 65x120cm Veuillez nous contacter si intéressé. Ce tirage fait partie de la série "Sacré Profane" C’est le cas de sa première émo...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Color Photography

    Materials

    Pigment

  • Vivace
    Located in PARIS, FR
    Photographie disponible en deux formats : 45x90cm et 65x120cm Veuillez nous contacter si intéressé. Ce tirage fait partie de la série "Sacré Profane" C’est le cas de sa première émo...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Color Photography

    Materials

    Pigment

You May Also Like
  • Dr Dre
    By David Bailey
    Located in London, GB
    David Bailey Dr Dre, 2001 Archival Inkjet on paper Image: 50.8 x 63.58 cm Sheet: 58.4 x 71.2 cm Edition of 10
    Category

    Early 2000s Contemporary Color Photography

    Materials

    Archival Ink, Archival Pigment

  • Lost in My Life (Receipts Seated)
    By Rachel Perry
    Located in New York, NY
    Lost in My Life Series
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Color Photography

    Materials

    Archival Pigment

  • Lost in My Life (Chiral Lines 1)
    By Rachel Perry
    Located in New York, NY
    Lost in My Life Series
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Color Photography

    Materials

    Archival Pigment

  • Lost in My Life (Chiral Lines 2)
    By Rachel Perry
    Located in New York, NY
    Lost in My Life Series
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Color Photography

    Materials

    Archival Pigment

  • Large Scale Photograph Archival Pigment Print, Detroit Color Photo Doug Rickard
    By Doug Rickard
    Located in Surfside, FL
    Doug Rickard (American b.1968) Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print. Features the work titled; A New American Picture - Detroit. Signed on verso and numbered 4/5. Work: 26 in. x 41 1/2 in. Frame: 26 1/2 in. x 42 in. Doug Rickard’s A New American Picture offers a startling and fresh perspective on American street photography. All of the images are appropriated from Google Street View; over a period of two years, Rickard took advantage of the technology platform’s comprehensive image archive to virtually drive the unseen and overlooked roads of America, bleak places that are forgotten, economically devastated, and abandoned. With an informed and deliberate eye, Rickard finds and decodes these previously photographed scenes of urban and rural decay. A New American Picture depicts American street scenes, located using the internet platform Google Street View. Over a four-year period, Rickard took advantage of Google’s massive image archive to virtually explore the roads of America looking for forgotten, economically devastated, and largely abandoned places. After locating and composing scenes of urban and rural decay, Rickard re-photographed the images on his computer screen with a tripod- mounted camera, freeing the image from its technological origins and re-presenting them on a new documentary plane. The low-resolution images that Rickard favors have a dissolved, painterly effect, and are occasionally populated with figures who acknowledge the camera, but whose faces are blurred, masking their identity. The photographs are thus imbued with an added surrealism and anonymity, which reinforces the isolation of the subjects and emphasizes the effects of an increasingly stratified American social structure. Rickard’s work evokes a connection to the tradition of American street photography, with knowing references to Walker Evans, Robert Frank and Stephen Shore. He both follows and advances that tradition, with a documentary strategy that acknowledges an increasingly technological world—a world in which a camera mounted on a moving car can generate evidence of the people and places it is leaving behind. Collectively, these images present a photographic portrait of the socially disenfranchised and economically powerless, those living an inversion of the American Dream.Doug Rickard (born 1968) is an American artist and photographer. He uses technologies such as Google Street View and YouTube to find images, which he then photographs on his computer monitor. His photography has been published in books, exhibited in galleries and held in the permanent collection of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Rickard is best known for his book A New American Picture (2010). He is founder and publisher of the website on contemporary photography, American Suburb X, and the website These Americans which publishes some of his collection of found photographs. This work features a black, African American man in the foreground walking in a bleak neighborhood in Detroit, Michigan. Rickard was born in San Jose, California and brought up in Los Gatos in the San Francisco Bay Area. His father was a prominent pastor and many family members were preachers and missionaries, with a "very Reaganesque, patriotic view of America", a country "special and unique". Rickard studied United States history—slavery, civil rights—and sociology, at University of California, San Diego, and "lost his faith in this family vision. His adult view of America was a land not just of great achievement but also of massive injustice." At age 12 he witnessed his father having a secret extramarital affair, that years later in 1988 he confessed to his congregation. Rickard says this experience prompted him "to look for the fault lines in the American dream." He lives in Shingle Springs, near Sacramento, California. For his series A New American Picture, Rickard "wanted to look at the state of the country in these areas where opportunity is non-existent and where everything is broken down", where "the American dream was shattered or impossible to achieve". It is said that this work comments on United States politics, poverty, racial equality and the socioeconomic climate, class; the use of technology in art, privacy, surveillance, and the large quantity of images on the web. He cites as influences the photobooks American Photographs (1938) by Walker Evans, The Americans (1958) by Robert Frank, Uncommon Places (1982) by Stephen Shore and American Night (2003) by Paul Graham. The work was first exhibited as part of Anonymes: Unnamed American in Photography and Film, curated by David Campany and Diane Dufour at Le Bal, Paris, in 2010. To mark that occasion Rickard produced the first edition of the book, with the publisher White Press. Its first American museum show was at New York's Museum of Modern Art. Select Publications: Aperture Remix. New York: Aperture, 2012. A series of books made in homage to another Aperture publication, each in an edition of 5 copies. Rickard's was a response to Uncommon Places by Stephen Shore. The other publications were by Rinko Kawauchi, Vik Muniz, Alec Soth, Taiyo Onorato & Nico Krebs, Martin Parr, Viviane Sassen, Penelope Umbrico and James Welling. Produced in conjunction with the exhibition Aperture Remix. A New American Picture. Nazraeli Press Six by Six, set 4 v. 5. Portland, OR: Nazraeli, 2012. Edition of 100 copies. The other volumes are by Robert and Kerstin Adams, Edward Burtynsky, Kenro Izu, Catherine Opie and Issei Suda. Staking Claim: a California Invitational. San Francisco: Modernbook, 2013. Photographs by Rickard as well as Matthew Brandt, Susan Burnstine, Eric William Carroll, John Chiara, Chris Engman, Robbert Flick, Todd Hido, Siri Kaur, Mona Kuhn, Matt Lipps, David Maisel, Klea McKenna, Mark Ruwedel, Paul Schiek and Christina Seely. Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Museum of Photographic Arts, San Diego, CA. Select Exhibitions: Solo exhibition 2012: Yossi Milo Gallery, New York, October–November 2012. Group Exhibitions 2010: Anonymes: L’Amérique sans nom: Photographie et Cinéma (Anonymous: Unnamed America in Photography and Film), Le Bal, Paris, September–December 2010. A thematic exhibition with works by Rickard as well as Jeff Wall, Walker Evans, Chauncey Hare, Lewis Baltz, Standish Lawder, Sharon Lockhart, Anthony Hernandez...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Color Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper, Archival Pigment

  • Cinema - Digital contemporary color photograph of parisian flying house
    By Laurent Chéhère
    Located in New York, NY
    From the iconic series of flying houses, Cinema is a digital pale pastel pink color photograph showcasing an old parisian house suspended in the air by ch...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Color Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper, Digital Pigment

Recently Viewed

View All