1 January 2009
Clare Strand – A Photoworks Monograph
During this period Strand’s art has developed through a series of increasingly interesting and unique projects that have explored various photographic genres, from Victorian portraiture to crime scene and forensic photography. In these series she has dwelt on the oddity of photography’s strange backwaters, its utilitarian functions and its infiltration of every corner of our lives, to make us question the value and complex meanings of photographic images. This might be simply quirky and strange, but in Strand’s work it is resolved through photographs of incredible quality and genuine originality.
In our photographically saturated times, Strand’s work remains distinctively new and difficult to place, and yet it is also uncannily familiar, drawing heavily on the genres she investigates. In recent years she has consistently worked in black and white and has exploited the traditional qualities of the fine print to startling effect. It is the wit, the irony and perverse logic of these formidable black and white series, with their continued clashing and mixing up of photographic ideas and sources, that has won her an international reputation.
This comprehensive survey of Strand’s practice is the sixth book in the Photoworks Monograph series.
Produced by Photoworks, co-published with Steidl
Essays by David Chandler, Ute Eskildsen and Ian Jeffrey, an interview with the artist by Chris Mullen
Edited by Rebecca Drew
Designed by SMITH
Hardback, 300mm x 230, 112 pages
90 b&w plates, 27 colour plates
ISBN: 978-3-86521-838-4
Published in 2009





