Belmont, Massachusetts
Maker
Kingston, Rodger
(American, b. 1941)
Date1988
MediumSilver dye bleach print
Dimensionsimage: 12 11/16 in x 19 1/4 in; paper: 16 in x 20 in
Credit LineGift of Zbiral/Teller and Organizers of the 1992 Chicago Photographers Print Fair
Object number1992:47
About the ArtistBorn in Seattle, Rodger Kingston works as a freelance documentary photographer and independent scholar. Kingston has been a committed observer of American popular culture, both as a long-time collector of vernacular photographs and in his own photographic practice. For the series American Icon, he photographed representations of cultural figures such as Marilyn Monroe and Charlie Chaplin in consumer objects and product displays, searching them out as they surface in the urban landscape. In the photograph Belmont, Massachusetts (1988), for instance, Kingston documents two tapestries--or possibly rugs--that hang side by side from someone's porch, each emblazoned with an identical image of Monroe's face. He produces these photographs as silver dye bleach prints, more commonly known as Cibachromes, which are characterized by a lustrous surface and vibrant colors that help to convey the common allure of the cultural icons that lie at the heart of the photographic study. Kingston earned a Masters degree in Education from Harvard University in 1978. As a scholar, his research has centered on Walker Evans, and in 1995, he published an illustrated biography of the influential photographer.Ai, Weiwei
2002; printed 2017