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Book Review Gong Co. Photographs by Christian Patterson Reviewed by Blake Andrews “WPhotography has a Vishnu complex. While regular folks are blithely content to let people and moments fade into the past, photographers want to preserve them. That urge kicks into high gear when destruction looms..."

Gong Co. by Christian Patterson.
https://www.photoeye.com/bookstore/citation.cfm?catalog=ZK632
Gong Co.
Photographs by Christian Patterson
TBW Books & Éditions Images Vevey, 2024. 224 pp., 164 color plates, 9x11".

Photography has a Vishnu complex. While regular folks are blithely content to let people and moments fade into the past, photographers want to preserve them. That urge kicks into high gear when destruction looms. Raise your hand if you’ve ever photographed an old building scheduled for demolition, a patch of nature before development into a subdivision, a rusting antique car, or birthday candles about to be blown out. To photograph is to freeze time, locking the present into the historical record. We capture reality like a bug trapped in amber. Vishnu (The “Preserver” in Hinduism) would approve.

For photographer Christian Patterson, the amber bug bit hard on a 2003 road trip through the Mississippi Delta. During a short stop in the small town of Merigold, an old brick building stirred his curiosity. It housed a family-owned store with the name painted on the side in all-caps: THE GONG CO. Patterson took some photographs and made a mental note of the location. Over the next several years he returned multiple times to poke around and take more pictures. Each visit, he found the store in worse shape than before. Its shelves stored a dusty museum of old merchandise. Did it actually sell anything? Who knew. Eventually, on a stop in 2013, he found the business closed for good. By that point Patterson had arranged private access through the owner. He continued to photograph in and around The Gong Co. until 2019 when the interior was finally gutted.


After a few years of editing, sequencing, and production tweaks, Patterson has released his findings as a photo monograph. Gong Co.’s co-publishers TBW and Éditions Images Vevey describe it as “a monumental memento mori to the decline and decay of a family-owned grocery store.” That’s a fair portrayal. But there’s a fine line between memento mori and ruin porn, as Patterson would be the first to admit. His shopworn photographs hang somewhere in the balance between the two poles, a precarious stance which lends them visual punch.


Before seeing any photos, Gong Co. puts the reader in a bygone mood with clever design features. For starters, the dust jacket has the texture and color of a brown paper sack. The simulacrum effect is enhanced with faux grocery stickers, masking tape, and a grimy hand print. Pulling back the jacket’s exterior folds — adorned with phrases like “Perishable”, “1978”, and “Going Out Of Business” — we uncover photos of stock items from yesteryear’s retail world, amid warnings about procrastination. Images of an air freshener, old-school pull tab, and fly swatter cast a swampy Delta spell. The book’s outer cover plays along. It’s a clothbound green facsimile, seemingly sun faded, thread worn and dog-eared. The endpapers recycle a floral pattern which recalls fifties wallpaper. By all initial appearances Gong Co. could pass for an ancient tome on a neglected bookshelf somewhere, perhaps in a small-town Mississippi shop?


Once past the end pages, the photos begin in earnest, and they continue without letup until the coda. Their sequence follows Patterson’s twenty year path of discovery in bite-sized frames, gradually penetrating from the store’s exterior into its private innards. A rear index charts the trajectory with helpful captions (a good page to study before diving into the photos). Image by image we trace Patterson’s investigations from Highway 61 to Merigold’s town streets, then further into the store’s main space, back rooms, office, and the owner’s home before, inexorably, Gong Co. is finally Going, Going, Gone.

Patterson’s visual style is neutral throughout. It’s a lazy day in the Delta. He’s in no hurry. He can’t quite decide if he should share his secret discovery in broad chunks, or compose it into abstract compositions. Most photos fall into one camp or the other, some into both. For general context, a handful of sweeping interior views of The Gong Co.’s inventory are very helpful. They’re photographed in turn facing N, S, E, and W. The place is a wreck. Peeling paint, displaced products, and debris-strewn aisles signal years of inattention.


Patterson spices these broad views with dozens of closely cropped subjects. Some photos isolate consumer goods and signs, recalling the odd artifactual interjections of Redheaded Peckerwood. Others take a more symbolic approach, blending shadow, shape, and color into visual chiaroscuros. We sense the eerie presence of humans throughout, but it’s subtle. Surely someone must have built and cared for this place at one point. But no actual people appear in the book apart from a few modeled hands. Despite the bright tonality of the book’s coated images, their take-home message is clear. The Gong Co. is a forlorn and forgotten backwater indeed.


If this were just another photobook of decrepit shop scenes — old barn photos, anyone? — I might be tempted to dismiss it as ruin porn and move on. What makes Gong Co. noteworthy is its novel design. In fact, few photobooks can match Gong Co.’s memento mori artifice. I’ve already described the dated cover features, but the main body of the book takes nostalgic homage to another level entirely. The interior pages are speckled with pre-imposed stains, smudge marks, and penciled notes. Some of them whisper “Mystery…” or “To open a store is easy…” The blemishes are faint at first, almost invisible. But they become more pronounced as the book progresses. Fake grease stains seep through multiple sections, a perfect semblance of maltreatment. Spill a few drops of beer on this book? No problem. They’ll blend right in. Feel free to handle with oiled palms too. When Gong Co. is viewed sideways, the spatterings present themselves in force. The page edges are mildewed with browning age marks, as if it was left in a damp place and forgotten a while. For a book about a fading institution, there is no better way to drive the point home.


This isn’t the first time that Patterson has pushed the photobook envelope, nor will it likely be the last. Redheaded Peckerwood broke open the multifarious dam on a generation of photo monographs, while Bottom of the Lake modeled itself after an old phone book. Both were innovative, but Gong Co. might be his most convincing trick yet. I’ve paged through it several times, and I can’t find a weakness in its senescent illusion. It looks, feels, and acts like an aging book. If only it had a mildewed smell, the ruse would be complete. Such a trait might be beyond publishing capability, at least for now. But who knows what the future holds. As Gong Co. proves, the passing of time can unlock many mysteries.

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Blake Andrews is a photographer based in Eugene, OR. He writes about photography at blakeandrews.blogspot.com.
Book Review Weegee: Society of the Spectacle Photographs by Weegee Reviewed by Brian Arnold "Currently on view at the ICP in New York is Weegee: Society of the Spectacle (Jan. 23-May 05, 2025). Incredibly, this is the 6th exhibition dedicated to gruff tabloid photographer; this is in part due to a recent donation to the museum of Weegee’s work by his partner Wilma Wilcox. I haven’t seen the show, but the catalog, published by Thames & Hudson, offers an interesting survey of the curiously unique vision of Weegee..."

https://www.photoeye.com/bookstore/citation.cfm?catalog=TH182
Weegee: Society of the Spectacle
Photographs by Weegee
Thames & Hudson, London, United Kingdom, 2025. 208 pp., 130 black-and-white illustrations, 8¼x10½x1".

"I was stuck, you see, because I didn’t want to do sort of a normal English broken German accent thing, so on the set was a little photographer from New York, a very cute little fellow called Weegee. You must have heard of him. And he had a little voice…And I got an idea…I put a German accent on top of that, and I suddenly got…him into Dr. Strangelove. So really, it’s Weegee."

— Peter Sellers

Currently on view at the ICP in New York is Weegee: Society of the Spectacle (Jan. 23-May 05, 2025). Incredibly, this is the 6th exhibition dedicated to gruff tabloid photographer; this is in part due to a recent donation to the museum of Weegee’s work by his partner Wilma Wilcox. I haven’t seen the show, but the catalog, published by Thames & Hudson, offers an interesting survey of the curiously unique vision of Weegee.

Born in 1899 in the Austro-Hungarian city of Lemberg (today part of Ukraine), Usher Fellig emigrated to the United States in 1913. Upon entry, his name was changed to Arthur Fellig. After teaching himself the basics of photography on his own, Fellig started his professional career as a photographer in 1918, working as both a darkroom technician and a reporter. The work he became most known for began around 1935, when he was a full-time freelance photojournalist. It was around this time he changed his name to Weegee, a homonym for Ouija, because as a reporter he claimed to be clairvoyant, always knowing just where to be as the action started. Working primarily for a leftist-leaning tabloid called PM Weekly, the photographer created an entirely unique archive of crime and other activities in New York City from Prohibition and through World War II.


His news photography might best be described as proto-noir, reportage from the streets of America’s biggest city that looked like stills from the greatest film noir (is it just me, or did Weegee look a little like Edward G. Robinson?), made over a decade before Hollywood co-opted the style. Pioneering the use of flash, the photographer created a unique view of the streets with harsh lighting and deep blacks, making life in New York appear like an existential abyss. Never defining himself as political, Weegee nevertheless created a powerful vision about class in America by frequently giving voice to working-class life in the city. The PM Weekly did define itself as a progressive magazine, a label the photographer denied, but then again, he was also connected to Sid Grossman and the Photo League (where he had his first exhibition). All this work coalesced into his first monograph published in 1945, Naked City, a relentless and raw look at New York composed with over 230 pictures.


Not long after Naked City, Weegee moved to Los Angeles and started what is now referred to as his second period as a photographer. It’s easy to imagine that the work he did in New York took a huge toll — witnessing so much pain and tragedy can never be easy, combined with the demands of running all his own production and business must have been exhausting. In California, he took his pictures in an entirely different direction and focused more on using the darkroom to define his pictures. He photographed many famous people of the day — Ronald Reagan, Mao Tse Tung, and Jackie Kennedy among them — and printed them by projecting the negatives through warped or frosted pieces of glass, prisms, and even condensers from his enlargers, making them all appear as slightly surreal caricatures (apparently Szarkowski hated this work and saw it as a joke, a complete waste of the photographer’s talent).


Weegee: Society of the Spectacle
is an accessible book that offers a clear, engaging introduction to Weegee’s work, not prioritizing the New York years over California. The pictures are divided into neat, thematic chapters, pointing to major trends and periods in the photographer’s career, each introduced by a quote by Weegee accompanied with a short passage explaining the selection. The contributors include Clement Cheroux, Cynthia Young, Isabelle Bonnet, and David Campany. Cheroux introduces the book and exhibition by presenting the idea that Weegee’s work anticipated Guy Debord and the Situationists International, the French artists that emerged in the 1960s. Like the SI, Weegee challenged our understanding of what cities represent, and, like Debord, understood the importance of the media in defining the urban condition (it’s likely Weegee and Debord never heard of one another). Bonet, a specialist in crime photography, offers insight into the emergence of crime scene photography, both regarding the tabloids and the development of forensic investigation techniques. Campany acknowledges the last major body of work Weegee developed while working on the set of Dr. Strangelove. Director Stanley Kubrick met Weegee early in his career; before he went to Hollywood, he worked as a news photographer in New York City. Kubrick loved Weegee’s work, even noted it as an essential influence, and felt it would be interesting to have him on set. He gave Weegee a unique role, he had already hired two other photographers to provide the studio production stills so the master was allowed to do as he pleased. Kubrick thought the harsh style Weegee developed would be refreshing compared to the more slick and polished pictures the studio wanted. And apparently the photographer really hit it off with Peter Sellers, even influencing the actor’s interpretation of the film’s main character, the Nazi scientist advising the Pentagon on nuclear strategy.


Weegee: Society of the Spectacle
provides a great introduction to the legendary photographer’s work. If one is really into collecting photobooks, there are certainly better examples of Weegee’s to be had (primarily Naked City, there are multiple printings of this book), but Society of the Spectacle offers a comprehensive, approachable overview of the photographer’s work, and thus it seems it was really intended as a souvenir for the exhibition rather than as a unique expression of the photographer’s work.

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xxx

Brian Arnold
is a photographer, writer, and translator based in Ithaca, NY. He has taught and exhibited his work around the world and published books, including A History of Photography in Indonesia, with Oxford University Press, Cornell University, Amsterdam University, and Afterhours Books. Brian is a two-time MacDowell Fellow and in 2014 received a grant from the Henry Luce Foundation/American Institute for Indonesian Studies.

Book Review I’ll let you be in my dreams if I can be in yours Photographs by Carolyn Drake & Andres Gonzalez Reviewed by George Slade "It’s as though Drake and Gonzalez looked to collaborative books by Alex and Rebecca Norris Webb or Mirta Gomez and Edwardo del Valle. The photographers simultaneously claim and refute authorship, strip it down to its pictorial essence, while leaving a breadcrumb trail of hints that they were in fact working side by side..."
By Carolyn Drake & Andres Gonzalez.
https://www.photoeye.com/bookstore/citation/ZK604
I’ll let you be in my dreams if I can be in yours
Photographs by Carolyn Drake & Andres Gonzalez
MACK, London, 2024. 144 pp., 9x11½".

[Spoiler alert: This review makes the claim that this is a fun book.]

“Carolyn Drake and Andres Gonzalez made photographs side by side along the US-Mexico border between 2018 and 2023.”

Unless you do a little Googling (no fair!) that’s all you get by way of backstory for this book. No captions, no essay, no bios, or curricula vitae. You have the rare opportunity to take a photobook on its merits as a self-contained object.

It’s as though Drake and Gonzalez looked to collaborative books by Alex and Rebecca Norris Webb or Mirta Gomez and Edwardo del Valle. The photographers simultaneously claim and refute authorship, strip it down to its pictorial essence, while leaving a breadcrumb trail of hints that they were in fact working side by side. Shot/reverse shot is so effective that one searches for traces of the other photographer. Two perspectives on the same street corner, the same woman’s hand, or on another’s shoulder. Nearly identical shadows implying no more than a few seconds between exposures. There is no attribution to these photographs, so who took which is a fruitless, probably pointless, game.


It’s a treat and a trick at once, like a constructed image by a conceptualist like Barbara Probst. Who’s zoomin’ who, Aretha Franklin might ask.

In plain fact, the US Mexico border areas are laden with significance. Befitting Drake’s membership in the collective, a Magnum-esque earnestness is signaled. It’s a serious subject, to be sure. The issue buzzes with concern. Yet this politically dense tidbit is left until the end of the book.


Well, almost the end. The last page features an image that doubles down on doubling. A twin floral portrait (two flowers side by side) with a multiple exposure feel to it. Almost as though two images were made at the same time then superimposed in post-production. Or that supplemental light was used in concert with or in opposition to natural light. Despite its reveal-all, post-script positioning, it’s a red herring, perhaps the least interesting image in the book. An anticlimax, to be sure.


One element of the puzzle is tipped off in a lovely, enigmatic image of a black-robed figure standing on an embankment, flanked by glowing studio lights that light up without cords (the miracle of batteries and high luminescence LED lights). Seen at a distance, the figure could be an actor in a Beckett drama, or in a Greek chorus. What we derive from this image is outright evidence that artificial light is employed in the project’s overall strategy, and indeed it — the light, not the lighting devices — appears in image after image, a bit of estrangement, a hint of commercialism, within a generalized context of direct sun and twilight.


The book/puzzle forces us to take images at face value with the “border” caveat. We also must extend ourselves to regard the people in the photographs at face value. The book doesn’t tell us anything about anyone. For those seeking elucidation turn to this 2020 magazine article, but to look at that feels a little like cheating, like side-stepping the work the photographers are offering us.

Is there something more profound happening here? Need there be? Can't “serious” photographers (Drake and Gonzalez both qualify) have a moment of play? Admittedly, this is sophisticated play. Subtle and subversive. Still, when was the last time you had fun flipping through a photobook?


Did the lacy white fabric framed and leaning on a chair in a “museum” context lend its pattern to the book’s wraps? Are those two pigeons perched on the blue awning a reference to the photographic duo, or to Drake’s earlier book about birds? Remember, lace is full of air.

The photographers each make cameo appearances in the layouts. But can we assume that the portraits were actually made by the partner, or was each a selfie? Serious fun for certain close viewers. We follow the couple on a meander from here to there — points unspecified. The lingering brilliance of the journey is the trip itself, not the end product.

One must write in elliptical fashion about this work. It is factual and obtuse at once. I’m enjoying the idea of the photographers presenting it to the publisher. It’s about the border! Sort of. Yes. And.

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George Slade, aka re:photographica, is a writer and photography historian based in Minnesota's Twin Cities. He is also the founder and director of the non-profit organization TC Photo. georgeslade.photo/

Image c/o Randall Slavin
Book Review Failing Photographs by Mike Brodie Reviewed by Blake Andrews “While browsing his latest book Failing, my imagination turns to Mike Brodie in the initial stages of editing. Approaching forty, he’s got a lot of miles under his belt, most of them documented in photos. As he sifts through decades of various prints, his editing task is monumental..."

Failing by Mike Brodie.
https://www.photoeye.com/bookstore/citation.cfm?catalog=DU900
Failing
Photographs by Mike Brodie
Twin Palms Publishers, Santa Fe, NM, 2024. 412 pp., 193 four-color plates printed on uncoated paper, 8½x11".

While browsing his latest book Failing, my imagination turns to Mike Brodie in the initial stages of editing. Approaching forty, he’s got a lot of miles under his belt, most of them documented in photos. As he sifts through decades of various prints, his editing task is monumental. Luckily, he has some help in the form of an angel on one shoulder and a devil on the other. He picks up a print and contemplates. Hmm. The angel and the devil both whisper advice into his ear. He makes a judgment, puts the print into the Yes pile or the No pile, and then moves on to the next one.

I’m happy to report that Failing’s Yes pile was sizable. Almost 200 photos made the final cut, creating a book nearly two inches thick. As the title suggests, the devil on Brodie’s shoulder ultimately vanquished the angel. Perhaps that was an inevitable outcome for someone who approaches both photography and life as a sui generis outsider. Living a vagabond lifestyle, social conventions and niceties tend to feel less pressing. And after the somewhat genial mood of his recent publications Tones of Dirt and Bone and Polaroid Kid, perhaps Brodie felt the time had come to unleash his inner demons.

The result is his grimmest book to date. “Here is the flip side of the American dream, seen from within.” That’s how Twin Palms describes Failing, and they’re not wrong. Whereas A Period of Juvenile Prosperity merely hinted at darker currents, this one plunges headfirst into the deep end. The photos are by turns raunchy, crude, disheartening, passionate, filthy, and occasionally hilarious. I should add that they are also consistently interesting. If it’s any consolation to the angel, the book takes a while to claim its namesake (adapted from a photo of the George E. Failing drilling parts catalog which appears near the midpoint). For a short while in fact, the sequence seems headed away from failure. Then, like so many photographic truths, the effect is revealed as a mirage.


Brodie’s epic adventures are segmented into three chapters: The Beginning, The Middle, and The End, in rough order of declining fortune. Throw in a King James typeface and liturgical preface, and this dense tome assumes a near Biblical quality. Before Brodie’s fall from grace comes an image of innocence, in the form of two lambs nuzzling in a pen. What could be cuter? This initial photo is followed by more benign material, e.g. a McDonald’s meal with friends, a man jumping for joy under a rainbow, a baby snake, Brodie’s lovely wife Celeste, and their new home under construction in Nevada. Hitchhikers hop aboard smiling, while nature’s bounty is ripe for the picking. Even a potentially ominous array of shotguns shells is photographically defanged in soft amber twilight.


It seems life is good. But don’t get too comfy. The Middle chapter establishes a darker mood immediately with a photo descriptively captioned Makeup and Meth. There’s probably no quicker exile from the garden than that combo. The Middle soon spirals through even bleaker imagery by way of a burning truck, a dead dog in a box, Brodie’s divorce (represented by a discolored broccoli flower), and a previously intact moth, now photographed in pieces. An impressive double spread photo of a massive derailment offers a summary judgement of where this train is headed: belly up and busted. By the time Brodie shows us a bent heroin spoon and then his erect penis tucked into a steering wheel, we’re mostly past the shock stage. But still left wondering, who’s the dick driving this thing? And is anyone watching the road? Within a few photos comes an answer of sorts: a cloud of black diesel exhaust spewing into the sky. Any angels in the vicinity have long since scattered.


If the reader can’t imagine Failing getting more vulgar, the bottom falls out in the last (and longest) chapter. The End opens in explicit form with a bloody heart on a piece of cardboard. Has Brodie’s gone missing perhaps? How else would he present photos of a house fire, dead jackrabbit, staph infection, and used needles with such equanimity? Captured on a phone screen, the needles become a sharp verdict on Instagram, one suffocating addiction shared on another.

And then, well, it just gets worse. A dead chicken, anyone? How about a cat crawling with maggots, a pair of old dentures on the floor, or the filthiest toilet you’ve ever seen? A computer desk stacked with guns, white powder, and Monster cans? A used tampon on the ground? A quick trick in a dirty alley? A Playboy model covered in shit? The sequence passes through death and decay, with deceased roommate, dog, homeless man, and daughter in quick succession. All capped by — a true Biblical miracle — a pregnancy?! The growing belly in the photo belongs to Mia Justice Smith, Brodie’s former lover and travel companion. Tragically, she lost the baby and then her own life, in short order. The book is partially dedicated in her memory, with a considerate plug for Shatterproof addiction treatment.


The pregnant photo comes near the end. Perhaps it’s meant as a hopeful beacon, to signal salvation after a book of repeated failings. A nice thought, but it seems too little too late. It’s just a finger in the dike here, staunching a sea of depravities. Taken in sum, Failing is brutal. It rivals Joel-Peter Witkin for debauchery, and Dash Snow for hedonistic nihilism. But there’s good news: As with those two photo stalwarts, we cannot look away. If these various pictures hang on the verge of failing, they’re also damned good.

There are a few running motifs which help pace the book, and keep Failure moving forward. Every few dozen pages, the primary photo sequence pauses for a few full-bleed spreads of travelogue imagery. Many of these images are motion blurred, showing roads and fields in passing. Life moves fast. You have to grab it by the horns, or perhaps by the highway shoulder. Then it’s back into the main current.


Reiterated subjects create another layer of connective tissue. Brodie photographs the same subject over time, for example a baseball in progressively deteriorating circumstances, or his own grimy hand holding common objects. The Winnemuca Hotel is photographed intact, and then being torn apart. In another sequence, a childhood bedroom is rephotographed over the course of several months. As with the full-page spreads, the clock is ticking. Though this be madness, it seems to infer, yet there is method in’t.


That brings me to the great irony of Failing. The inside joke of this book, of course, is that Brodie is not failing. He’s seen more of backroads America than most other artists put together. He’s a prolific photographer, a former Instagram phenom, the author of four respected photobooks, a diesel mechanic, and one of the more sincere souls in the Machiavellian world of fine art. All while following his own muse. He’s an achiever, in other words. Based on initial word of mouth, Failing seems likely to enhance that reputation. Despite its coarse subject matter — or maybe because of it? — the book is a minor hit in certain art circles. If the critical reaction sustains, it should help cement Brodie as a success.

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Blake Andrews is a photographer based in Eugene, OR. He writes about photography at blakeandrews.blogspot.com.