From the Museum to the Street: Garry Winogrand’s <i>Public Relations</i> and the Actuality of Protest

Focusing on Garry Winogrand&#8217;s <i>Public Relations</i> (1977), this article explores the problematic encounter between street photography and protest during the Vietnam War era. In doing so, it considers the extent to which Winogrand&#8217;s engagement with protest altered t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Simon Constantine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-05-01
Series:Arts
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/8/2/59
Description
Summary:Focusing on Garry Winogrand&#8217;s <i>Public Relations</i> (1977), this article explores the problematic encounter between street photography and protest during the Vietnam War era. In doing so, it considers the extent to which Winogrand&#8217;s engagement with protest altered the formalist discourse that had surrounded his practice and the &#8216;genre&#8217; of street photography more broadly since the 1950s. It is suggested that, although Winogrand never abandoned his debt to this framework, the logic of protest also intensified its internal contradictions, prompting a new attitude towards the crowd, art institution, street and mass media. By exploring this shift, this article seeks to demonstrate that, while the various leftist critiques of Winogrand&#8217;s practice remain valid, <i>Public Relations</i> had certain affinities with the progressive artistic and political movements of the period.
ISSN:2076-0752