American Landscapes
By Troy Patterson
Jul 13, 2022




























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Relaxed Elegance Since 1977
Relaxed Elegance Since 1977
Relaxed Elegance Since 1977
Relaxed Elegance Since 1977
Relaxed Elegance Since 1977
Relaxed Elegance Since 1977
Relaxed Elegance Since 1977
Relaxed Elegance Since 1977
Relaxed Elegance Since 1977
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By Troy Patterson
Jul 13, 2022
The New Yorker's Troy Patterson embarks on a journey through the American suburban landscape.
Photographing Charleston, South Carolina, and its environs, James Harvey-Kelly produces a study of ease and order in American suburbia. There is an air of careful idealisation to the portfolio. The visual noise of suburban sprawl is reduced to the happy clamour of a used-car lot, for instance, and signs of both the city’s siege in the American Revolution and its role in the eruption of the American Civil War remain out of frame.
And yet this is not a simple indulgent fantasy of Americana. Though the viewer is sure to detect a certain nostalgia in its eye for the everyday grandeur of architecture and for the art of folksy mailboxes alike, it is a nostalgia in the service of a contemporary vision. In one image, a proud Colonial house, its front columns solid with solemn dignity, stands under a sky intersected by black overhead wires and white vapor trails. The scene, capturing an unmistakable sense of place in an understated way, conveys a lovely weight of local humidity.
For more than forty years, the artist Peter Halley has been charting the architecture, energy and hidden circuitry of modern life, long before the internet made networks a way of being. We met him in his Chelsea studio to talk about his enduring visual language, his time running Index magazine, and how New York has shaped and been shaped by his work.
Ira Silverberg has been a leading figure in New York’s literary scene in the 1980s. We caught up with him at his home in Bellport, Long Island, for a long lunch and to be regaled with stories about everyone from JT LeRoy to William Burroughs, to his time as the doorman at the Limelight and as the Literature Director of The National Endowment of the Arts under Barack Obama.
A potted history of the baseball cap, and the way they travelled effortlessly from dugouts to designer runways.
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