Atta Kim at ICP in the NY Times

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I wasn't much interested in seeing the Atta Kim show at ICP (or the concurrent show at Yossi Milo) until I read today's review in the NY Times.

Every day, hundreds of tourists snap photographs of a crowd- and car-jammed Times Square. The average picture takes — what? — 15 seconds to shoot? The same picture of the same place takes the Korean photographer Atta Kim eight hours. And his Times Square ends up with only an eerie trace of a human presence, like a deserted movie set.

Holland Cotter's above description applies to only one of Kim's projects. His variety of approaches is uncommon for a photographer working at his level. Once a photographer is identified with a particular style of approach, it's difficult to break out into another style. Consider the reaction Bob Dylan got when he went electric.

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1 Comments

Orenthal said:

Atta's work at Yossi Milo looks like covers of 80's new wave albums.

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This page contains a single entry by Todd published on July 12, 2006 6:21 AM.

the rising power - and price - of the photographic print was the previous entry in this blog.

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