A Kind of Magic

Photographer Arthur Tress’s “shaman vision quest dream journey”

Shadows of a man and birds connected by string.

Shadow, Cannes, France, negative 1974; print 1975, Arthur Tress. Gelatin silver print, 7 5/8 x 7 9/16 in. Getty Museum, Gift of John V. and Laure M. Knaus, 2019.169.6. © Arthur Tress Archive LLC

By Rachel Barth

Nov 07, 2023

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Photographer Arthur Tress revels in the weird and fantastic—a hand sticking out of a bus seat, boys blending in with trees, children and adults playing against backdrops of rubble and trash—dark, spooky, unnerving images.

Tress, who spent time in his early career as a documentary photographer and traveled widely, staged his photographs to set a mood and tell a story.

Tress is one of the foremost practitioners of staged photography. He’s well known for his surreal photobooks, especially The Dream Collector (1972), but his career began earlier, in the 1960s, with commercial projects that encouraged his artistic development and anticipated his later fantastical works.

Arthur Tress: Rambles, Dreams, and Shadows (out now from Getty) looks closely at the artist’s early career, from 1968 to 1978, from his travels abroad through his return to the United States, stopping in Sweden, Russia, Appalachia, New York, San Francisco, and many other places. The images and quotations below are drawn from the exhibition catalog and take you into his world.

A young girl holds on to branches, with a doll's head mounted on one of them.

Girl with Doll’s Head, Capels, West Virginia, 1968, Arthur Tress. Gelatin silver print, 8 1/16 × 6 3/16 in. Getty Museum, Gift of the Ottersons, 2018.114.32. © Arthur Tress Archive LLC

Tress traveled to Appalachia several times early in his career, and he became increasingly passionate about accurately representing the character of the destitute yet beautiful region and its people. Photographs curator Mazie Harris writes that the twisted branches and lonely image reflect the region’s “barren future.”

A young man sits around dry branches.

Young Man in Woods, Central Park, New York, 1969, Arthur Tress. Gelatin silver print, 9 3/4 x 7 3/4 in. Collection of David Knaus. © Arthur Tress Archive LLC

In 1969 Tress photographed “the Ramble,” known as a gay cruising ground in New York’s Central Park. But he never published this work, says photographs curator James Ganz, “because doing so could have exposed the photographer and his subjects to embarrassment or harassment.” Even the act of taking these pictures was dangerous at the time. This body of work is a deeply personal, intimate expression and probing of Tress’s identity as a gay man and also reflects much about the culture of the time and the anxieties, fears, and longings experienced by members of his community.

Two horse toys for children lay among a field of rubble with a large building looming in the background.

Hobby Horses, Harlem River, Bronx, New York, 1970, Arthur Tress. Gelatin silver print, 8 7/8 x 7 13/16 in. Getty Museum, Gift of J. Patrick and Patricia A. Kennedy, 2019.168.2. © Arthur Tress Archive LLC

The above image is part of Tress’s series Open Space in the Inner City (1969–71). It shows his environmentalism, which he cultivated throughout his travels, especially in his exploration of Appalachia. Having settled in New York after living in Sweden, Tress was shocked by the rampant urban blight and crowding in the city and how few open spaces there were for people to play, thrive, and live. His series helped bring attention to this widespread civic issue and was shown by institutions like the Sierra Club and the New York State Council on the Arts.

A man is covered in mud and dirt in a swampy area.

Wild Man of the Forest, Central Park, New York, 1969, Arthur Tress. Gelatin silver print, 13 3/4 x 10 3/4 in. Getty Museum, Gift of Trixy Castro, 2019.167.11. © Arthur Tress Archive LLC

While Tress was at work on what would become his Dream Collector series, he sought the advice of famed children’s author Maurice Sendak, who is most widely known for the book Where the Wild Things Are. At the end of their visit, Tress offered Sendak the choice of one of Tress’s photographs, and Sendak picked Wild Man of the Forest, Central Park, New York, which “evoke[s] the archetypal figure of the medieval wild man of the woods.”

Shadows of a man and birds connected by string.

Shadow, Cannes, France, negative 1974; print 1975, Arthur Tress. Gelatin silver print, 7 5/8 x 7 9/16 in. Getty Museum, Gift of John V. and Laure M. Knaus, 2019.169.6. © Arthur Tress Archive LLC

Between 1972 and 1975 Tress created a series and photobook called Shadow. The above work, featuring the artist and shadows cast by a sculpture of birds, appeared toward the end of the book in a section titled “Magic Flight.” Curator of photographs Paul Martineau says this picture—juxtaposed with other images of imprisoned shadows—symbolizes freedom and “traces a mystical dream journey of an individual soul from the past to the present and into the future, through birth, death, and enlightenment.”

A man sits on an elaborate chair outside.

Last Portrait of My Father, New York, New York, 1978, Arthur Tress. Gelatin silver print, 15 1/8 x 14 7/8 in. Collection of David Knaus. © Arthur Tress Archive LLC

“[This] photograph of my father in a snowstorm is, in fact, a kind of surrogate self-portrait that mirrors my own hollow fearfulness about my own body’s decline and disappearance into a cold emptiness,” Tress wrote in a 2022 letter to curator Paul Martineau.

In 1970 Tress wrote about the magical properties of a photograph, and, surely, he is a visual magician, an artist possessed of a creative vision and intuition that allows him to connect to his subjects in a deep, revelatory way. Tress’s images pull you into his imagined, constructed worlds. His work is mysterious, surprising, surreal, and dreamlike. His images, the product of personal experiences and feelings, are universal in their play on and exploration of human fears, desires, and longings. He once described his series Shadow as a “shaman vision quest dream journey.”

Arthur Tress: Rambles, Dreams, and Shadows is on view from October 31, 2023, to February 18, 2024 at the Getty Center.

The exhibition catalog is available for purchase at the Getty Store.

Arthur Tress

Rambles, Dreams, and Shadows

$60/£50

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Arthur Tress book cover
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