Exhibition
Suzanne Opton
Vermont, 1970

Chelsea © Suzanne Opton

Ethel & Ulbert with a chicken © Suzanne Opton

Frances and Leaf © Suzanne Opton

Frank and Walter Parlor © Suzanne Opton

Frank on his bed © Suzanne Opton

Gayleen and Gawleen © Suzanne Opton

Gayleen in field © Suzanne Opton

Gayleen and Gawleen, Verna copy © Suzanne Opton

Hink and Jim © Suzanne Opton

Mason's Living room © Suzanne Opton

Mrs Mason Leaving © Suzanne Opton

Walter at Christmas © Suzanne Opton
Suzanne Opton’s images of Chelsea, Vermont in 1970’s are on display at the new Robert Anderson Gallery in New York. Opton’s first major series, the Vermont work, reflects her beginnings as a portraitist who pushes the boundaries of the genre.
Opton was a beginning unschooled photographer at the time. Her idea was that if she photographed the same seven families for a year, she would learn how to make a good photograph. She quickly discovered that the most interesting people in this town of 1000 inhabitants were not the pillars of the community, but rather those who never left home. They lived with a brother or sister at the end of a dirt road in the house they grew up in. They didn’t aspire to a life much different than their parent’s lives. They just lived to live.
Opton’s images offer a tender and intimate view of these quirky bygone lives. She visited one or another of these families almost every day, trading recipes, talking about the weather. She was the daughter come to visit.
Publication of Opton’s newest book, “Soldier / Many Wars,” by Decode Books, is scheduled publication in the Fall 2011
Until April 30
Robert Anderson Gallery
24 West 57th Street. Fifth Floor
New York City
Links
http://www.suzanneopton.com
http://www.robertandersongallery.com
Contributors

