NEW YORK—At a time when time seems to be moving faster than ever, when the world feels confusing, chaotic, when vulgarity is even celebrated, and so-called art can look no different from curbside garbage, Rodney Smith continues to make, dare we say, beautiful pictures.
His photographs tease one to question, to wonder, to feel delight in a moment captured. Even when we are overloaded with images, his photographs are unforgettable. The beauty conveyed stems from a man who cares deeply about sharing his vision with optimism, despite all the harshness of the world.
“I kind of represent a world that is possible if people act at their best. It’s a world that’s slightly beyond reach, beyond everyday experience, but it’s definitely not impossible,” he said reflecting on his work at his studio by his home in The Palisades.
Smith laments what he called the unfortunate repercussions of modernism. “It has created a kind of vulgarity, a kind of anything you feel and think is just ’spout it out.' It can be in your face, there is no refinement at all. The sense of decorum has left, and I think that’s a problem for the culture,” he said.
“Why isn’t there a counterpoint to the world, why isn’t there something that is really beautiful, serene, and graceful to pull people out of that?” he asked.
Similar to the effect of a 1940s movie—showing idealized relationships between men and women, with a sense of civility and refinement—he wants his photographs to pull people out of ugliness.
He feels it is his calling. It’s the central issue he’s been concerned about perhaps from the very beginning. It was also the same first topic he brought up when I interviewed him for a small photography magazine 20 years ago.
“I realize everything has changed, but remember a change is not necessarily an improvement,” he wrote in his blog, “The End Starts Here,” where he shares his musings with much revelry and insight.
Although the classical and whimsical aesthetic in his photographs—which appear in countless magazines, books, and galleries around the world—is easily recognizable, his name is not widely known.
He recently completed his fifth book, a retrospective coffee table book that includes over 175 photographs from the past quarter century of his 45-year career. It’s his only book so far that includes some color photographs, which he only started taking 10 years ago.
