Meatyard as self-taught visionary: a portrait of the photographer by
acclaimed art historian Alexander Nemerov
The legendary, mysterious photographer Ralph Eugene Meatyard (1925-72)
lived in Lexington, Kentucky, working in a close-knit community of
artists and writers while making his living as an optician. Ralph
Eugene Meatyard: American Mystic, by esteemed art historian Alexander
Nemerov, is a groundbreaking study of Meatyard's work, creative thinking
and sources of inspiration.
Given rare access to the personal library in which Meatyard had
tellingly annotated works of fiction, poetry and other pages of personal
significance, Nemerov examines the artist's process of creating
characters and staging dreamlike scenes. American Mystic also
considers the artists and writers whose work influenced Meatyard, such
as William Blake, Ludwig Wittgenstein and Thomas Merton.
Meatyard's celebrated series
The Family Album of Lucybelle Crater
and many of his other photographs cast family members and friends in
central roles, often masked and enacting symbolic dramas. Of these
mystical works, Nemerov writes, "For Meatyard, a photograph is a careful
or casual arrangement meant to produce a feeling it cannot name."