Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

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BRUCE DAVIDSON SUBWAY DYE TRANSFER PRINTS The Photographs of SUBWAY were made in the early 1980s in and around New York City’s subway system and represent the only comprehensive body of work produced in color by the legendary photographer, Bruce Davidson. The artist has remarked: “I wanted to transform the subway from its dark, degrading and impersonal reality into images that open up our experience again to the color, sensuality and vitality of the individual souls that ride it each day. In transforming the grim, abusive, violent, and often beautiful reality of the subway into a language of color, I see the subway as metaphor for the modern world. It is a great social equalizer. As our being is exposed, we confront our mortality, contemplate our destiny, and experience both the beauty and the beast. From the moving train above ground we see glimpses of the city, and as the train moves into the tunnel fluorescent light reaches into the gloom, and trapped inside, we all hang on together.” Bruce Davidson, 2003

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Transcript of Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

Page 1: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

               

     

BRUCE  DAVIDSON    SUBWAY  DYE  TRANSFER  PRINTS  

   The  Photographs  of  SUBWAY  were  made  in  the  early  1980s  in  and  around  New  York  City’s  subway  system   and   represent   the   only   comprehensive   body   of   work   produced   in   color   by   the   legendary  photographer,  Bruce  Davidson.    The  artist  has  remarked:  “I  wanted  to  transform  the  subway  from  its  dark,  degrading  and  impersonal  reality  into  images  that  open  up  our  experience  again  to  the  color,  sensuality  and  vitality  of  the  individual  souls  that  ride  it  each  day.  In  transforming  the  grim,  abusive,  violent,  and  often  beautiful  reality  of  the  subway  into  a  language  of  color,  I  see  the  subway  as  metaphor  for  the  modern  world.  It  is  a  great  social  equalizer.  As  our  being  is  exposed,  we  confront  our  mortality,  contemplate  our  destiny,  and  experience  both  the  beauty  and   the  beast.  From  the  moving   train  above  ground  we  see  glimpses  of   the  city,  and  as   the  train  moves  into  the  tunnel  fluorescent  light  reaches  into  the  gloom,  and  trapped  inside,  we  all  hang  on  together.”  

-­‐  Bruce  Davidson,  2003  

Page 2: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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Untitled,  Subway,  New  York,  [Yellow  pants],  early  1980s  20  x  24  inch  Dye  Transfer  Print  

Signed  by  the  artist  in  pencil  on  verso  Printed  by  Guy  Stricherz  in  2014  

From  a  limited  edition  of  ten  From  the  collection  of  the  artist  

Illustrated  in:  Bruce  Davidson,  Subway,  Aperture,  2011,  page  88  $12,500.  

Page 3: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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Untitled,  Subway,  New  York,  [Red  tracksuit],  early  1980s  20  x  24  inch  Dye  Transfer  Print  

Signed  by  the  artist  in  pencil  on  verso  Printed  by  Guy  Stricherz  in  2014  

From  a  limited  edition  of  ten  From  the  collection  of  the  artist  

Illustrated  in:  Bruce  Davidson,  Subway,  Aperture,  2011,  page  72  $12,500.  

           

Page 4: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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Untitled,  Subway,  New  York,  [jewelry],  early  1980s  20  x  24  inch  Dye  Transfer  Print  

Signed  by  the  artist  in  pencil  on  verso  Printed  by  Guy  Stricherz  in  2014  

From  a  limited  edition  of  ten  From  the  collection  of  the  artist  

Illustrated  in:  Bruce  Davidson,  Subway,  Aperture,  2011,  Cover  and  page  125  Please  inquire  for  price  

           

Page 5: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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Untitled,  Subway,  New  York,  [woman  folded  arms],  early  1980s  20  x  24  inch  Dye  Transfer  Print  

Signed  by  the  artist  in  pencil  on  verso  Printed  by  Guy  Stricherz  in  2014  

From  a  limited  edition  of  ten  From  the  collection  of  the  artist  

Illustrated  in:  Bruce  Davidson,  Subway,  Aperture,  2011,  page  42  $12,500.  

           

Page 6: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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Untitled,  Subway,  New  York,  [Purple  dress],  early  1980s  20  x  24  inch  Dye  Transfer  Print  

Signed  by  the  artist  in  pencil  on  verso  Printed  by  Guy  Stricherz  in  2014  Nine  in  a  limited  edition  of  ten  From  the  collection  of  the  artist  

Illustrated  in:  Bruce  Davidson,  Subway,  Aperture,  2011,  page  107  $12,500.  

           

Page 7: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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Untitled,  Subway,  New  York,  [couple  by  stairs],  early  1980s  20  x  24  inch  Dye  Transfer  Print  

Signed  by  the  artist  in  pencil  on  verso  Printed  by  Guy  Stricherz  in  2014  

From  a  limited  edition  of  ten  From  the  collection  of  the  artist  

Illustrated  in:  Bruce  Davidson,  Subway,  Aperture,  2011,  page  89  $12,500.  

           

Page 8: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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Untitled,  Subway,  New  York,  [train  passing  cemetery],  early  1980s  20  x  24  inch  Dye  Transfer  Print  

Signed  by  the  artist  in  pencil  on  verso  Printed  by  Guy  Stricherz  in  2014  

From  a  limited  edition  of  ten  From  the  collection  of  the  artist  

Illustrated  in:  Bruce  Davidson,  Subway,  Aperture,  2011,  page  39  $12,500.  

           

Page 9: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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Untitled,  Subway,  New  York,  [couple  hair  beads],  early  1980s  20  x  24  inch  Dye  Transfer  Print  

Signed  by  the  artist  in  pencil  on  verso  Printed  by  Guy  Stricherz  in  2014  

From  a  limited  edition  of  ten  From  the  collection  of  the  artist  

Illustrated  in:  Bruce  Davidson,  Subway,  Aperture,  2011,  page  95  $12,500.  

             

Page 10: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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Untitled,  Subway,  New  York,  [Orange  pants],  early  1980s  20  x  24  inch  Dye  Transfer  Print  

Signed  by  the  artist  in  pencil  on  verso  Printed  by  Guy  Stricherz  in  2014  

From  a  limited  edition  of  Ten  From  the  collection  of  the  artist  

Illustrated  in:  Bruce  Davidson,  Subway,  Aperture,  2011,  page  27  $12,500.  

   

Page 11: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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Untitled,  Subway,  New  York,  early  1980s  20  x  24  inch  Dye  Transfer  Print  

Signed  by  the  artist  in  pencil  on  verso  Printed  by  Guy  Stricherz  at  the  CVI  Laboratory  in  2006  

In  a  limited  edition  of  ten  Illustrated  in:  Bruce  Davidson,  Subway,  Aperture,  2011,  page  23  

 $20,000.      

Page 12: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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Untitled,  Subway,  New  York,  early  1980s  20  x  24  inch  Dye  Transfer  Print  

Signed  by  the  artist  in  pencil  on  verso  Printed  by  Guy  Stricherz  at  the  CVI  Laboratory  in  2006  

In  a  limited  edition  of  ten  Illustrated  in:  Bruce  Davidson,  Subway,  Aperture,  2011,  page  33  

 $15,000.        

Page 13: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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Untitled,  Subway,  New  York,  early  1980s  20  x  24  inch  Dye  Transfer  Print  

Signed  by  the  artist  in  pencil  on  verso  Printed  by  Guy  Stricherz  at  the  CVI  Laboratory  in  2006  

In  a  limited  edition  of  ten  Illustrated  in:  Bruce  Davidson,  Subway,  Aperture,  2011,  page  32  

 $8,500.    

Page 14: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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Untitled,  Subway,  New  York,  early  1980s  20  x  24  inch  Dye  Transfer  Print  

Signed  by  the  artist  in  pencil  on  verso  Printed  by  Guy  Stricherz  at  the  CVI  Laboratory  in  2006  

In  a  limited  edition  of  ten  Illustrated  in:  Bruce  Davidson,  Subway,  Aperture,  2011,  page  51  

$15,000.    

Page 15: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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Untitled,  Subway,  New  York,  early  1980s  20  x  24  inch  Dye  Transfer  Print  

Signed  by  the  artist  in  pencil  on  verso  Printed  by  Guy  Stricherz  at  the  CVI  Laboratory  in  2006  

In  a  limited  edition  of  ten  Illustrated  in:  Bruce  Davidson,  Subway,  Aperture,  2011,  page  50  

$6,500.        

Page 16: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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Untitled,  Subway,  New  York,  early  1980s  20  x  24  inch  Dye  Transfer  Print  

Signed  by  the  artist  in  pencil  on  verso  Printed  by  Guy  Stricherz  at  the  CVI  Laboratory  in  2006  

In  a  limited  edition  of  ten  Illustrated  in:  Bruce  Davidson,  Subway,  Aperture,  2011,  page  70  

$15,000.    

Page 17: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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Untitled,  Subway,  New  York,  early  1980s  20  x  24  inch  Dye  Transfer  Print  

Signed  by  the  artist  in  pencil  on  verso  Printed  by  Guy  Stricherz  at  the  CVI  Laboratory  in  2006  

In  a  limited  edition  of  ten  Illustrated  in:  Bruce  Davidson,  Subway,  Aperture,  2011,  36  

$6,500.        

Page 18: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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Untitled,  Subway,  New  York,  early  1980s  20  x  24  inch  Dye  Transfer  Print  

Signed  by  the  artist  in  pencil  on  verso  Printed  by  Guy  Stricherz  at  the  CVI  Laboratory  in  2006  

In  a  limited  edition  of  ten  Illustrated  in:  Bruce  Davidson,  Subway,  Aperture,  2011,  page  133  

$6,500.      

                                         

Page 19: Bruce Davidson SUBWAY | Individual Dye Transfer Prints

ROSEGALLERY | Bergamot Station Arts Center | 2525 Michigan Ave G-5 | Santa Monica | CA 90404 | P: 310.264.8440 | F: 310.264.8443 | [email protected] | www.rosegallery.net

 

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   The  Dye  Transfer  Process    The  Dye  Transfer  Process  is  one  of  the  oldest,  and  most  beautiful  color  photographic  processes.  Practiced  by  a  relative  handful  of  photographers,  probably  less  than  a  hundred  in  the  world,  it  is  a  labor  and  time  intensive  procedure  that  yields  extraordinary  results.  Dye  transfer  prints  are  valued  by  collectors  and  museums  not  only  for  their  beauty  but  the  archival  qualities  of  the  prints  themselves  -­‐  unlike  most  color  photographs  dye  transfer  prints  have  great  longevity  without  fading.  Invented  in  the  1930's,  prior  to  the  mass  availability  of  color  film,  the  process  was  one  of  the  few  methods  of  making  a  color  photograph  for  perhaps  a  decade  or  so.  The  printmaking  itself  is  somewhat  akin  to  seriography  or  offset  printing.  Making  dye  transfer  prints  is  an  exacting,  meticulous  procedure,  using  expensive  and  somewhat  caustic  materials.  Once  other  methods  of  making  color  photographs  became  available  dye  transfer  photographs  were  almost  exclusively  the  realm  of  critical  advertising  and  documentary  work,  and  fine  art  photographers.    Originally,  3  black  and  white  negatives  were  made  in  a  stationery  camera  using  colored  filters  of  Red,  Green  &  Blue,  to  create  a  set  of  "Separation  Negatives".  Today  most  practitioners  use  a  4x5  color  transparency  for  the  original  and  make  the  separations  by  contact  printing  the  transparency  onto  3  sheets  of  B/W  film  with  Red,  Green  &  Blue  colored  light  from  an  enlarger.  The  separations  have  an  extremely  narrow  tolerance  for  variation  in  processing  and  each  individual  photographer  must  calibrate  his  own  system  through  intensive  film  testing  to  arrive  at  the  required  density  and  contrast  range  for  the  separations.  The  separations  are  used  to  expose  sheets  of  Matrix  Film,  which  are,  in  essence,  positive  renditions  of  the  Red,  Green  and  Blue  separations,  inversely  corresponding  to  their  primary  colors  of  Cyan,  Magenta  &  Yellow.  The  Matrices  are  of  the  same  size  as  the  final  print  and  are  composed  of  a  gelatin  coating  over  on  an  estar  base.  When  processed,  the  areas  that  receive  more  exposure  (the  darkest  areas)  "harden"  more  than  the  areas  of  lesser  exposure  (the  highlights).  Processing  eventually  washes  away  the  unhardened  gelatin  and  the  resulting  effect,  if  you  could  look  at  the  processed  matrix  film  in  cross-­‐section  under  magnification,  would  reveal  differential  relief  between  the  highlights  and  the  shadow  areas,  much  like  hills  and  valleys.  The  matrices  are  then  soaked  in  organic  dyes  of  Cyan,  Magenta  &  Yellow,  and  the  each  matrix  absorbs  the  primary  colored  dyes  into  the  gelatin  coating.  The  final  print  is  obtained  by  aligning  each  matrix  over  a  sheet  of  high  quality  specially  treated  paper  using  registration  pins,  and  then  firmly  rolling  each  matrix  onto  the  paper  and  allowing  the  dyes  to  transfer  into  the  paper.  Fine  color  balance  is  obtained  by  subtle  removal  or  retention  of  each  dye  prior  to  transfer,  or  subsequent  "re-­‐dyes".    Dye  Transfer  prints  look  like  no  other  type  of  photograph.  There  is  a  richness  and  depth  to  each  print  that  is  unattainable  with  any  other  process.  In  addition,  because  of  the  controls  available  to  the  photographer,  dye  transfer  prints  can  more  fully  realize  the  photographer's  vision  and  replicate  what  he  or  she  "saw  and  felt  at  the  time  of  exposure"  (to  quote  Ansel  Adams).      In  September  of  1993  the  Eastman  Kodak  Company,  the  sole  manufacturer  of  the  commercially  available  products,  announced  that  it  was  discontinuing  production  of  Dye  Transfer  materials  and  all  inventories  of  materials  were  allocated  and  sold  to  existing  practitioners  at  that  time.  The  discontinuation  of  the  Kodak  Dye  Transfer  process  marks  the  end  of  an  era  in  the  art  world  as  well  as  a  crossroads  for  we  few  photographers  who  have  enjoyed  presenting  our  work  in  this  special  and  beautiful  form.  

Text  Copyright  1995,  Todd  Jagger