Born
in Massachusetts in 1947, Henry
Horenstein
was on a path to becoming a historian when he discovered photography.
Captivated by the work of Robert Frank and Danny Lyon, Horenstein
entered the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) where he studied
with Harry Callahan and Aaron Siskind. After completing his MFA at
RISD in 1973, Horenstein’s first major project was a documentary
survey of the people and character of country music. As a long-time
fan, Horenstein recognized that the culture of country music was
changing, losing the homey, down-to-earth character of “hillbilly”
music, and adopting the slicker nature of contemporary country music.
His goal was to preserve a vanishing culture by capturing it in
photographs, and for nearly a decade, he traveled throughout the
United States, documenting the artists and audiences at honky-tonk
bars, outdoor festivals, and community dances. The body of work that
Horenstein created (published in 2003 as Honky Tonk) is a remarkable
portrait of a distinct period in American cultural history.
Some
of Horenstein’s later work has followed a similar theme, creating
documentary portraits of distinct American sub-cultures, such as the
worlds of horse racing, boxing clubs, and baseball. In recent years,
Horenstein has also developed an extensive body of work that combines
elements of portraiture, abstraction, clinical documentation, and
landscape photography. Working with animals as well as human
subjects, Horenstein creates compelling and frequently ambiguous
images that explore the patterns, textures and geography of skin,
scales and hair. Mixing the exotic and the ordinary, and making it
difficult to tell which is which, Horenstein causes the viewer to
pause and look closely. In doing so, we are made to re-examine
ourselves as well as the world around us.
Horenstein's
work has been exhibited in galleries and museums both nationally and
internationally, including the Smithsonian Institution’s National
Museum of American History, Washington, D.C.; the International
Museum of Photography, George Eastman House, Rochester, New York; the
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; and Fabrik der Kunste, Hamburg, Germany.
Photographs by Henry Horenstein can be found in many public and
private collections including the Library of Congress, the Museum of
Fine Arts, Houston, and the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, Georgia.
Horenstein is the author of over 30 books including several
monographs and a series of highly successful photography textbooks
that have been used by hundreds of thousands of students around the
country. Horenstein currently lives in Boston and is a professor of
photography at RISD.


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