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Lecturer to Discuss Andy Warhol’s Impact on Photography

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Lyle Rexer will speak on “Andy Warhol and the Impact on Photography,” Wednesday, June 21 from 6 to 8 p.m., at the Bruce Museum, 1 Museum Dr.

The changes wrought by Andy Warhol’s work on painting and art are well known. Less discussed is the impact on photography. Warhol played a crucial role in changing the climate for image making and helped usher in a photographic era of bad pictures of bad subjects. (It’s no coincidence that both Stephen Shore and William Eggleston, both pilloried for being pedestrian photographers, spent time at Warhol’s “factory.”) This lecture explores Warhol’s influence, direct and indirect, on photography since the 1970s.

Rexer is the author of several books, including The Edge of Vision: The Rise of Abstraction in Photography (2009) and Photography’s Antiquarian Avant Garde: the New Wave in Old Processes (2002). In addition, he has published many catalogue essays and articles on art, architecture, and photography and contributed to such publications as The New York Times, Art in America, Aperture, BOMB, Parkett and DAMn. As a curator, he has organized exhibitions in the United States and internationally, most recently “The Edge of Vision,” a selection of contemporary abstract photography. He teaches at the School of Visual Arts in New York and is a columnist for Photograph magazine.

Advance registration is required. Free for Bruce members, $15 for non-members. At the door: $10 Bruce members, $25 non-members. For tickets, go to eventbrite.com/e/andy-warhol-and-the-impact-on-photography-tickets-34144364714 by June 19. After June 19, space permitting, tickets will be available for purchase at the door.

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