- Spruce Street Boogie
- from the series Composites, 1964-1984
Frame: 47 1/2 × 43 × 3 1/2 in. (120.7 × 109.2 × 8.9 cm)
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Trained at the Institute of Design in Chicago, Ray Metzker studied under a line of of inventive and socially engaged photographers. Metzker's interests centered on the built environment and photography’s ability to depict and mirror the perceptual qualities of urban life. He frequently emphasized the interplay of shadow and solid form to created boldly graphic street photography that drew out the fragmentation, pattern, and dissonance inherent to cityscapes. As Metzker’s interest in formal experimentation intensified, he fractured and multiplied his images to make large-scale composite grids with a greater sense of dynamism and fluidity of representation than his single-shot images.
Provenance[Light Gallery, New York]; purchased by MFAH, 1981.
Exhibition History"Photographic Masterworks: Recent Acquisitions from the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston," Glassell School January 23 - March 4, 1990.
"Evocative Presence: Twentieth Century Photographs in the Museum Collection," The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, February 27 - May 1, 1988
"Target Collection of American Photography: A Century in Pictures," The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston December 3 - February 25, 2007; Austin Museum of Art May 19 - August 12, 2007; Art Museum of South Texas, Corpus Christi June 5 - August 24, 2008.
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