Tag: Nancy Rexroth

  • Nancy Rexroth: Iowa | LENSCRATCH

    Nancy Rexroth: Iowa | LENSCRATCH

    Nancy Rexroth: Iowa

    When I first discovered the Diana camera in the 1990’s there were few places to look for inspiration. That was, until I found the seminal book by Nancy Rexroth titled IOWA. It was difficult to lay hands on a copy as it had been originally published in 197

    via LENSCRATCH: http://lenscratch.com/2017/11/nancy-rexroth-iowa/

    When I first discovered the Diana camera in the 1990’s there were few places to look for inspiration. That was, until I found the seminal book by Nancy Rexroth titled IOWA. It was difficult to lay hands on a copy as it had been originally published in 1977.  But I did find it and the book is now dogeared, from hours of looking and being inspired by the magic that a simple toy camera, in the hands of an artist, could produce. Her poetic, well seen capture of people and places in her life were and are an inspiration to generations of photographers. Forty years after its original publication,  IOWA  has been reissued by the University of Texas Press, now in a hardcover edition that includes twenty-two previously unpublished images. The photographs are accompanied by a new foreword by Magnum photographer and book maker Alec Soth and an essay by internationally acclaimed curator Anne Wilkes Tucker, “who affirms the continuing power and importance of IOWA within the photobook genre”. New postscripts by Nancy Rexroth and Mark L. Power, who wrote the essay in the first edition, complete the volume.

  • B: Q & A with Nancy Rexroth

    B: Q & A with Nancy Rexroth

    Q & A with Nancy Rexroth

    Self Portrait, Athens, Ohio 1969, Nancy Rexroth • from the preface to Nancy Rexroth’s Iowa • Since its publication in 1977 Nancy Re…

    Link: http://blakeandrews.blogspot.com/2011/02/q-with-nancy-rexroth.html

    Since its publication in 1977 Nancy Rexroth’s book Iowa has become an underground classic. Shot in the small rural country of Southeastern Ohio using a Diana camera with a plastic lens, and named after her childhood memories, the book is mysterious on many levels. It has long been out of print and copies are scarce. I found one at the University of Oregon library, quickly fell in love with it, and eventually tracked down its author to ask some questions about Iowa, Diana, and photography.