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Ralph Eugene Meatyard May 1925 - May 1972 Ralph Eugene Meatyard (May 1925- May
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Ralph Eugene Meatyard May 1925 - May 1972 Ralph Eugene Meatyard (May 1925- May 1972) Annalisa Rorvik.

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: Ralph Eugene Meatyard May 1925 - May 1972 Ralph Eugene Meatyard (May 1925- May 1972) Annalisa Rorvik.

Ralph Eugene Meatyard

May 1925 - May 1972

Ralph Eugene Meatyard(May 1925- May 1972)

Annalisa Rorvik

Page 2: Ralph Eugene Meatyard May 1925 - May 1972 Ralph Eugene Meatyard (May 1925- May 1972) Annalisa Rorvik.

Background

• Meatyard was never photographed

• He was born in Normal, Illinois • He discovered his artistic talent

in a photo club he joined in 1950

• Six years later, he took over the club and began to experiment with new techniques (painting, masks)

• He had sons, a wife, and was a basketball coach and PTA member.

Page 3: Ralph Eugene Meatyard May 1925 - May 1972 Ralph Eugene Meatyard (May 1925- May 1972) Annalisa Rorvik.

•Meatyard often used masks on his subjects• He was ahead of his time and focused on “the beauty of ideas rather thanideas of the beautiful”.• When asked why he uses masks in his pictures, Meatyard answered, “Masks refuse to let us dismiss these figures as anonymous‘other people.’ They become instead effigies of ourselves”.

Meatyard’s Masks

Page 4: Ralph Eugene Meatyard May 1925 - May 1972 Ralph Eugene Meatyard (May 1925- May 1972) Annalisa Rorvik.

Figure and Boat (7 x 7, 1961)

• Meatyard often took pictures that were blurry with movement.•He did this to represent time and mortality by dwelling on motion and life.•From this idea, Meatyard’s style of No-Focus pictures originated.

Page 5: Ralph Eugene Meatyard May 1925 - May 1972 Ralph Eugene Meatyard (May 1925- May 1972) Annalisa Rorvik.

No-Focus Pictures

• Meatyard created No-Focus pictures intentionally by jiggling the camera slightly as he snapped the shot.

• By doing this, he contradicted any association with realism and set himself apart from many photographers in his day.

Page 6: Ralph Eugene Meatyard May 1925 - May 1972 Ralph Eugene Meatyard (May 1925- May 1972) Annalisa Rorvik.

Untitled (7.5 x 7.5 inches, 1960)

• Some critics say that Meatyard used this photo of children in an abandoned house to symbolize life and death.• Others claim that he uses the photograph to represent the past and the present.• Meatyard’s photos were very philosophical.• He studied Zen extensively and incorporated it into his work.

Page 7: Ralph Eugene Meatyard May 1925 - May 1972 Ralph Eugene Meatyard (May 1925- May 1972) Annalisa Rorvik.

“I will never make an accidental photograph”

• Meatyard used metaphorical themes in his photos unlike any other American photographer during his time period. • He combined his knowledge of art with his intellect to make symbolic and complex images.

Page 8: Ralph Eugene Meatyard May 1925 - May 1972 Ralph Eugene Meatyard (May 1925- May 1972) Annalisa Rorvik.

Genre- Abstract Surrealism

•Meatyard considered himself to be an abstract surrealist•To him, surreal meant “beyond real”•He used photos to give a sense of reality to non-real situations

Page 9: Ralph Eugene Meatyard May 1925 - May 1972 Ralph Eugene Meatyard (May 1925- May 1972) Annalisa Rorvik.

Untitled (Michael and Christopher outside brick building) (1960)

• This is my favourite of Meatyard’s photos because of his use of focus• The boy jumping is out of focus, but the bricks behind him are focused• The boy’s white shirt and the dark window contrast each other • Short depth of field makes everything look flat except the two boys