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Arthur Danto has described Lynn Saville as New York's answer to Eugène Atget, because she prowls her city at the other end of the day, picking up pieces of the past in the present, just before it is swallowed by shadows. For her new monograph,Dark City, Saville focused on vacant spaces--shuttered storefronts, back alleys, blank billboards, empty lots--with the occasional ghostly figure hurrying through the frame. Working at twilight and dawn with a medium-format camera (setting up her tripod quickly so as not to attract police attention), Saville captured busy city streets depopulated and emptied out, industrial spaces and storefronts alike gone quiet. Color and light come from the sky, streetlights, neon signs or surveillance lighting. Seemingly otherworldly, the images in Dark Cityalso tell a more pragmatic story of the changing urban landscape--vacancies caused by financial crisis, and construction projects spurred on by economic recovery, gentrification and development.
Dark Cityincludes an introduction by acclaimed author Geoff Dyer and photographs taken across the US, including in Columbus, Ohio; Portland, Maine; Lowell, Massachusetts; Jersey City and the Meadowlands, as well as around New York City.
Lynn Savilleis a New York-based photographer who specializes in photographs taken at twilight and dawn-- the boundary times between night and day, as she calls them. Saville studied at the Pratt Institute and Duke University and is represented by Yancey Richardson in New York....the artist takes no moral stance on the issues of development, gentrification and displacement, but is concerned with the outward signs and symbols of economic change. She wears her social engagement lightly, not allowing it to encumber her feeling for color and light, her sense of composition, or her curiosity about the invisible hand of the real estate market and its visible effect on the fabric of everyday urbanl#ò
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