|
Keith
de Lellis Gallery
is pleased to present the first retrospective of photographs by
Gordon Coster (1907-1988). Coster is an American original who led
a distinguished four-decade, multi-faceted career in photography
beginning in the mid-1920s. With versatility and resourcefulness,
Coster moved seamlessly between different photographic genres and
enjoyed a long, successful career in advertising, industrial photography,
and photojournalism.
Growing
up in Baltimore, Coster parlayed an intense passion for his hobby
into a livelihood. While a member of the Baltimore
Camera Club in the 1920s, he made a name for himself when his
modernistic images were accepted for exhibition in important international
photographic salons. He was especially proud of his Bauhaus inspired
“Shadow of the Washington Monument” (1925) reproduced
in the rotogravure section of the Baltimore Sun. As a precocious
19 year-old, he was producing images that were on the cutting edge
of what was then considered new in photography.
Coster
initially found work in the photo-illustration studio of a local
Baltimore department store. In the 1920s photographs replaced drawing
in advertising illustration. Coster seized this opportunity by moving
to New York where he landed a job photographing for the prestigious
Underwood & Underwood studios headed by Lejaren Hiller. Coster
secured his place in the field by creating innovative photo-illustration
for advertising and industry. His pictures appeared in newspapers,
magazines and catalogs selling to the American consumer everything
from household appliances to fashion, cosmetics and food.
Coster
relocated to Chicago in 1930 where he founded a mid-western branch
of Underwood & Underwood Studios. He established his independence
in 1936 by opening his own studio in Chicago where, for the next
six years, he did much of the photography for Marshall Field Company
and other large Chicago institutions.
His experiments
during the greater part of the 1930s gradually shifted his focus
towards journalism. This evolution ultimately led Coster to follow
documentary photography as a career path and he freelanced for Life
and Fortune
magazines. His early social documentary photographs of labor strife
and civil rights issues reflected a personal and emotional dedication
to the concerns and welfare of his fellow man.
Some
of his more extensive projects are dedicated to the American life
of the mid-west. There, he produced a series on wheat farming and
a detailed photo-documentary on the Tennessee
Valley Authority Dam Project of the late 1930s. During the Second
World War Coster photographed the impact of combat on the home front.
He saw and recorded automotive factories transforming into manufacturers
of military vehicles, women manning factories, pep rallies and bake
sales organizing in support of the war.
Moholy-Nagy
offered Coster an opportunity to lecture on documentary photography
to the students of the Institute of Design in Chicago during the
1946 “New Vision in Photography” seminar. He continued
to lecture in 1950-51 and again in 1960, focusing his classes on
socially oriented themes.
Starting
in the late 1940s, he freelanced for Time,
Fortune, Holiday, Ladies
Home Journal and Scientific
American. He ceased making photographs in 1964 and eventually
retired in 1982. Gordon Coster left his mark on the world of photography
in a successful lifelong career that paralleled the changing face
of the medium in the first half of the twentieth century.
|