PORTLAND a transient guide
de r.chorneau
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Acerca del libro
PORTLAND appears across three interconnected photobooks by r.chorneau as a long modernist meditation on the city and the solitary act of moving through it. Working almost entirely in black and white until the sudden chromatic rupture of The Year of the Snake, these books reject spectacle in favor of presence, shadow, gesture, weather, fatigue, and accident. Chorneau photographs Portland less as location than existential condition where cold light, bus windows, exhausted workers, lovers, wanderers, and the overlooked architecture of daily survival accumulate into something readable as one extended human document. Influenced by Evans, Frank, DeCarava, and Akerman, his sequencing treats the photobook as a single unfolding image broken into fragments where meaning accrues slowly through rhythm, recurrence, and the gravity of looking.
Alma Sugar, 2026
Características y detalles
- Categoría principal: Libros de gran formato
- Categorías adicionales Fotografía artística, Fotografia callejera
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Características: Cuadrado grande, 30×30 cm
N.º de páginas: 106 - Fecha de publicación: may. 29, 2026
- Idioma English
- Palabras clave portland, street photography, r.chorneau
Acerca del creador
r chorneau is an american painter and photographer born in los angeles in1952. self taught and formed as much by labor as art schools, working in boat yards, machine shops, and commercial fishing before devoting himself fully to painting and photography. his work moves between modernist street photography and deeply physical painting, shaped by shadow weather solitude and the dignity of ordinary life. over the last decade he produced thousands of photographs walking the streets of savannah and portland, building books that read as one long human document broken into fragments. living and working in portland with the painter, ruth hunter, he continues to make art outside fashion, careerism, and institutional permission, guided instead by endurance observation and the necessity of seeing.
