Ray Charles White
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Cuttalossa Suite – Poplar
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup:Cuttalossa Suite – Oak
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup:Cuttalossa Suite – Beech
Ray Charles White
Cuttalossa Suite, 1993Screenprint, Arches 88 300 g/m230 x 21 inches (76.2 x 53.34 cm)Edition of 75 plus 10 APFurther images
Viewing Rooms
BiographyB. 1961, TORONTO, CANADA
Ray Charles White has lived and worked in New York since the early 1980’s. He studied photography with Ansel Adams in Yosemite, and then at the School of Visual Arts and the New School in New York, before beginning his career photographing for Andy Warhol’s Interview Magazine. He also is known for his portraits of celebrated cultural figures including William Burroughs, David Hockney, Louise Bourgeois, Tony Bennett, and Allen Ginsberg among others. In an essay on White’s work, Henry Geldzahler (former Dia curator & curator of 20th Century Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art) wrote: “It was David Hockney, who, in many sessions of working and talking, emphasized to Ray that one of the true subjects of photography is the ebb and flow of the life of the moment, the continuum of time and space in which photographer and subject find themselves. Ray brings no theoretical considerations to bear in his work, no gimmicks, no preordained compositional preferences. Lit naturally, laying bare the workings of time. Ancient and immediate. He fixes his images tenderly yet forcefully.”
White’s work has been shown both nationally and internationally. Exhibitions include: Senior & Shopmaker, New York; Marcia Rafelman Fine Arts, Toronto, Albemarle Gallery in London, and Marcel Sitcoske, San Francisco, CA. White’s work can be found in the collections of the Tate, London, FAE-Musee D’Art Contemporaine, Lausanne, Switzerland, California State University, Modern Collection, and the Dia Art Foundation, New York.