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What Was True: The Photographs and Notebooks of William Gedney

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Published here for the first time is the extraordinary and stirring collection of photographs and writings of an enigmatic photographer. A retrospective exhibition of Gedney's work opens this month (December 1999) at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. 145 duotones.

192 pages, Hardcover

First published December 1, 1999

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Daniel.
151 reviews
December 29, 2018
Gedney's work is beautiful and authentic, a word everyone today seems to be using to describe their work even if it's not true. His portraits in Kentucky are some of my favorites.
Profile Image for Jeff Jackson.
Author 4 books529 followers
May 9, 2011
Four and a half stars. Anyone who's interested in discovering the creative germ of Geoff Dyer's novel "Jeff in Venice, Death in Varanasi" will be interested in Gedney's photos of India and his notebooks about his time there. Beyond that, Gedney's images of hand-to-mouth hippie communes and rural Kentucky family life have a startling intimacy and immediacy that make these potentially stale subjects seem fresh. I could've used more photos and less notebooks, but this collection makes the case for Gedney's immense visual talents nonetheless.
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