Robert Adams
Questions for an Overcast Day
Fraenkel Gallery and Matthew Marks Gallery , San Francisco, 2008

pages 72
first edition
dimensions 24.8 × 17.8 cm, softcover with Jacket
language English
ISBN 1-880146-46-0
Questions for an Overcast Day is a series of 33 photographs of young alder trees growing along the Oregon coastline near the artist’s home. The series begins by focusing on the branches of the trees, and, progressing from one image to the next, narrows its focus, culminating with several images of a single leaf. The leaves on the trees appear perforated, the precise cause of which is unknown. The artist likens the particular pattern of erosion on each leaf to hieroglyphics, reading in them a unique “calligraphy of disaster.” About them, Adams writes: What would account for the condition of the leaves— drought, insects, rocky ground, disease, herbicide, wind? Are the leaves beautiful? As with the artist’s earlier photographs—of suburban detritus, tract housing under construction and devastated, clear-cut forest—the viewer is invited to find beauty as it coexists with the imperfection, even destruction, of the present day.
ARTISTS
IMAGES
Robert Adams

American photographer who has focused on the changing landscape of the American West recording there, in over fifty books. His work first came to prominence in the mid-1970s through his book The New West (1974) and his participation in the exhibition New Topographics: Photographs of a Man-Altered Landscape in 1975. He has received two Guggenheim Fellowships, a MacArthur Fellowship, the Deutsche Börse Photography Prize and the Hasselblad Award. He lives with his wife Kerstin in Astoria, Oregon, United States of America.