Early Work
303 Gallery
November 5–December 19, 2025
New York

Stephen Shore (b. 1947) remains the preeminent practitioner of the American vernacular in photography. The consistency of his vision of the offhand everyday is explored in this exhibition and attendant book, both titled Early Work. The occasion presents an opportunity to expose the roots of the artist’s nascent vision and photographic influences.

In the street photographs of his precocious adolescence, Shore channels the sensibility of Walker Evans’s candid portraits of 1930s and ’40s New Yorkers: figures momentarily caught in their daily commutes or guarded preoccupations. Shore shot with both an awareness of photographic precedent and a youthful curiosity that imbues his subjects with a more tender, interior complexity than Evans. This series exemplifies how the young Shore was, in Harold Bloom’s literary analogy, a “strong poet” in his own right—not despite, but precisely because of, his straightforward engagement with the epoch-defining documentary poetics that constitute Evans’s American genius loci. The fact that Evans himself had previously cited European photographers such as Eugène Atget and August Sander—both artists for whom the generic category of documentary photography became a springboard for aesthetic profundity—suggests that Shore’s own instincts, shaped by his epoch, extend this lineage toward a broader, more global awareness of the commonplace as pictorially rich.

303 Gallery’s coincident show of the German artist Hans-Peter Feldmann wonderfully complements Shore’s in demonstrating how a wider tradition of generic aesthetics can engender a productively creative ontology. Feldmann was based in Düsseldorf; a show mounted in the same city from 2010 to 2011, entitled Der Rote Bulli, traced Shore’s transatlantic influence on what came to be called the Düsseldorf School of Photography, which included Bernd and Hilla Becher and Thomas Struth. The title of that show was based upon an image of Shore’s of a red Volkswagen bus parked on Church Street in Easton, PA, adjacent to the location of one of Evans’s most iconic photos, View of Easton, Pennsylvania (1935). Shore’s atavistic revisiting of Evans’s old stalking grounds proved a vision quest that both literally and figuratively retraced and then supplanted the older artist’s topographies. It’s an important genealogy to recount, given how impactful prior photographic precedence is evident in the younger Shore’s development.

One can see, too, the presiding influence of Evans in images reproduced in the book of New York storefronts in planar parallel to the camera’s position. In one he captures the proprietor of a photo studio standing in its doorway, in another the fugitive hand of a news agent in his cubby surrounded by tabloids and “girly magazines.” Such frank references to the proliferation of images via mechanical reproduction take on (despite their gritty realism) an enduring poignance given the acceleration of digitally augmented impermanence since. Yet one sees the artist coming into his own quirk in relation to the offhand oblique with which he is most commonly identified. Sharp angles, such as one capturing his parents on a street corner in Rhinebeck, NY, and another depicting a doorway loiterer of an urban coffee shop—begin to multiply. Such pictorial complexity is heightened in an image of a soccer practice taken at a boy’s boarding school that a twelve-year-old Shore attended in 1959, in Tarrytown, NY. Each player diminishes in perspective almost mathematically into the playing field’s distance. Another image that precociously nods to both photographic process and visual syntax has the school’s headmaster,Williams Dexter, taking a group photo while being photographed by the young Shore shadowed in the foreground. Dexter’s awkward, backwards gesture toward the photographer/viewer appears to “direct” his/their gaze to the prosaic work of the “set-up shot.”