Magic eyes: the surreal world of Arthur Tress – in pictures From doll makers to swamp-dwellers, the Brooklyn photographer turns his unique gaze on the more dreamlike aspects of America and beyond
Main image: ‘A singular figure’ … Self-Portrait in Photomat Mirror, Coney Island, New York, 1970. Photograph: Arthur Tress courtesy J Paul Getty Museum
Fri 1 Dec 2023 02.00 EST Last modified on Fri 1 Dec 2023 07.54 EST
Bruce at Dawn, Paper Flower Maker, East Village, New York, 1970 Rambles, Dreams, and Shadows is a richly illustrated volume and the first critical look at the early career of Arthur Tress, a singular figure in the landscape of postwar American photography. Arthur Tress: Rambles, Dreams, and Shadows is published by Getty Publications Photograph: Arthur Tress/J Paul Getty Museum
Share on Facebook Cemetery, Queens, New York, 1969 While Tress travelled internationally as a social documentary photographer in the mid-1960s, upon returning to the US he embarked on a series devoted to the people of Appalachia and New York City before pursuing more personal exhibitions and book projectsPhotograph: Arthur Tress/J Paul Getty Museum
Share on Facebook Gay Activists at First Gay Pride Parade, Christopher Street, New York, 1970 During the 1960s and 70s, Tress delved deeper into the worlds of surrealism, fantasy and his own queer identityPhotograph: Arthur Tress/J Paul Getty Museum
Share on Facebook Minette as Gloria Swanson in Ruins of Fox Theater, Brooklyn, New York, 1971 An exhibition also called Arthur Tress: Rambles, Dreams, and Shadows is at the Getty Center, Los Angeles, until 18 February Photograph: Arthur Tress/J Paul Getty Museum
Share on Facebook Self-Portrait in Photomat Mirror, Coney Island, New York, 1970 Tress was born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1940. He started taking photographs as a teenager, capturing the decaying Coney Island amusement parksPhotograph: Arthur Tress courtesy J Paul Getty Museum
Share on Facebook Hands on the Staircase, Isla Mujeres, Mexico, 1972 Tress spent five years travelling, mostly in Asia and Africa, and developed an interest in ethnographical photography Photograph: Arthur Tress/J Paul Getty Museum
Share on Facebook Wild Man of the Forest, Central Park, New York, 1969 Tress used his camera to raise awareness about the costs of pollution – from both an economic and health perspectivePhotograph: Arthur Tress/J Paul Getty Museum
Share on Facebook Pearl Norwood, Maker of Raggedy Ann Dolls, Banner Elk, North Carolina, 1968 Tress’s first professional assignment was from the US government – he was tasked with recording the endangered folk cultures of AppalachiaPhotograph: Arthur Tress/J Paul Getty Museum
Share on Facebook Dream Therapist, Harold Ellis, New York, New York, 1975 In the late 1960s Tress produced a series based on children’s dreams. This would evolve into work that dealt with the hidden dramas of adult relationships and the reenactments of gay desire Photograph: Arthur Tress/J Paul Getty Museum
Share on Facebook Friends Playing Cards, Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, New York, 1970 In his home city, Tress photographed across many genres – from straight documentary to a more personal mode of ‘magic realism’ Photograph: Arthur Tress/J Paul Getty Museum
Share on Facebook Girl and Moon Dream, New York, New York, 1968 From the early 1980s, Tress began shooting images in colour. His more recent work includes the circular images of his Planets series and the diamond-shaped images of PointersPhotograph: Arthur Tress/J Paul Getty Museum
Share on Facebook Shadow, Cannes, France, 1974 Tress lived in Cambria, California, for 25 years, but these days lives San FranciscoPhotograph: Arthur Tress/J Paul Getty Museum
Share on Facebook Topics ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7tbTEoKyaqpSerq96wqikaJmiqa6vsMOeqqKfnmS0orjLnqmyZ2Jlf3R7w56aaGhhZLqis8icZJ6xlah6tbTEZqquqqKarq151qippZxdpLNurdGtn66qXam%2Fpr%2FSZqCnZaCesLXB0Z6q