PASSING THROUGH MOVING IN AND GETTING AWAY WITH IT: Gordon Matta-Clark New York City Graffiti Photographs, 1972–73
Author
Gordon Matta-ClarkPublishers
OM BooksInfo
1008 pages
2025
230mm × 180mm
Hardcover
ISBN
9798988796039
,
of 9
From 1972 to 1973, Gordon MaAa-Clark took over fifteen hundred photographs of graffiti in New York City. These
pictures are some of the earliest documentation of an emerging art form, and are an under-recognized body of work
from Matta-Clark—an artist who used the city’s crumbling infrastructure to reveal the social and political implications
of architecture and urban design.
This publicaLon features every frame from every roll of film Matta-Clark shot, organized according to the sequence of
contact sheets in the artist’s archive. Taken together, these pictures demonstrate Matta-Clark’s obsession with the graffiL
that had exploded across the city’s walls, subways, and buses, and show him growing bolder as he moved from
photographing on the streets and subway platforms, to trespassing in outer borough train yards. While he was out on
these documentary missions, MaAa-Clark also photographed abandoned architecture, infrastructure, and the social life
of the city. Those pictures are included as well, as they show the relationship between graffiti and themes that are more
commonly associated with the artist’s work.
An essay by Antonio Sergio Bessa and a text by Jonathan Lethem accompany the photographs.