Los Angeles Times

A fresh photo concept

ROBERT CUMMING, 1943 – 2021

- CHRISTOPHE­R KNIGHT ART CRITIC

Robert Cumming, an artist best known for Conceptual photograph­s that were instrument­al in a major transforma­tion of camera work in the 1970s and early ’80s, died Dec. 16 in Desert Hot Springs, Calif. He was 78.

According to his life partner, Margaret Irwin-Brandon, Cumming died from complicati­ons of Parkinson’s disease.

Cumming worked primarily in black-and-white, the establishe­d format employed to distinguis­h photograph­y as serious art rather than an element of commercial mass media, which favored color. He often made large-format contact prints, emphasizin­g a commitment to directness and honesty over preciousne­ss and darkroom manipu

lation. But he discarded the usual sober, documentar­y pose of Modernist art photograph­y, preferring instead to throw a monkey wrench into the visual mix.

Typical was “Ansel Adams Raisin Bread” (1973), a diptych with a quirky reference to Adams, the reigning king of glamorous, ostensibly straightfo­rward landscape photograph­y. A storebough­t loaf of packaged bread, some individual slices, several plates and a box of raisins featuring a sunny picture of a young woman in a field holding a platter of fruit are casually arranged atop a table, which is set up outdoors in a garden patio.

The picture is devoid of any artful compositio­n or lighting. A second photograph in the pair is virtually identical — except this time each bread slice is conspicuou­sly dotted with a few dozen raisins. The bread is an echo of the tabletop, a flat plane on which ordinary objects have been placed. Human interventi­on in the scene is inescapabl­e. Photograph­ic truth is underscore­d, all the while made absurd.

Critic Andy Grundberg once noted of his photograph­s, “Cummings nearly pulls the wool over our eyes. But he is never interested in true deception, only the appearance of it, and he gives away his sleight of hand in every piece.”

With his friend and sometime studio-mate William Wegman, who started out making videos but eventually moved into still photograph­s centered on his soulful Weimaraner, Man Ray, Cumming was among the first Conceptual­ly

influenced photograph­ers to enjoy early success. The new genre of camera work was sometimes exhibited under the umbrella “fabricated to be photograph­ed,” which acknowledg­ed the degree to which all photograph­s inescapabl­y incorporat­e a fictional, manufactur­ed element.

Sometimes Cumming used his own body as an eccentric subject, as in “67-degree body arc off circle center” from 1975. Shown in profile with his hips thrust forward, his torso arched back and his neck and head awkwardly aligned with the angle of his legs, he’s a mathematic­al or scientific demonstrat­ion whose geometry turns the graceful rationalit­y of Leonardo da Vinci’s “Vitruvian Man” on its ear. The title’s geometric forms drawn around his body on the surface of the photograph might have been made with an oversized pen-nib, into which the hand on Cumming’s hip is discreetly hidden.

The artist’s photograph, like a drawing, is an artifice.

His work as a painter, sculptor and performanc­e artist informed his distinctiv­e, often witty approach to images made with a camera, which Cumming began to explore in 1969 and continued for more than a decade. Artists as diverse as Eve Sonneman, Jan Groover, Lew Thomas, Judy Fiskin and Lewis Baltz were blurring traditiona­l boundaries in different but Conceptual­ly cogent ways. Photograph­y would never be the same.

Cumming was born in 1943 in Worcester, Mass., a once vigorous industrial city on the wane after World War II. He earned a bachelor’s degree in 1965 at the Massachuse­tts College of Art in Boston and an MFA in 1967 at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana, both in painting.

After an initial teaching job at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, where he began the transition into camera work, he was hired in 1970 at Cal State Fullerton.

Cumming’s first major group show was “24 Young Los Angeles Artists” at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 1971. Two years later, when he was 30, his first solo exhibition of photograph­s opened at Cal State Long Beach. A 1986 retrospect­ive at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York traveled to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. He exhibited widely.

Cumming received National Endowment for the Arts grants in photograph­y (1973), the experiment­al category of “new genres” (1974) and printmakin­g (1983), as well as a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship in 1980-81. Thirtythre­e of his photograph­s are in the collection of the J. Paul Getty Museum; his work also is represente­d in the Whitney, SFMOMA and New York’s Museum of Modern Art.

In 1978 Cumming returned to New England to teach at Connecticu­t’s Hartford Art School, one of the nation’s oldest art schools, later establishi­ng his studio in the small town of Whately in Western Massachuse­tts.

He met Irwin-Brandon, a professor of European Baroque music at Mount Holyoke College, in 1988. The couple moved to Desert Hot Springs in 2013. In addition to Irwin-Brandon, Cumming is survived by a sister, Virginia, and a brother, Edward.

 ?? Robert Cumming Janet Borden Inc. ?? CONCEPTUAL ARTIST
Robert Cumming often made himself the subject of his witty photograph­s, as in “67-degree body arc off circle center” (1975).
Robert Cumming Janet Borden Inc. CONCEPTUAL ARTIST Robert Cumming often made himself the subject of his witty photograph­s, as in “67-degree body arc off circle center” (1975).

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