Excerpt from the Conduit Interview
Welcome to Mr.
Crewdsons Twilight Neighborhood
Gregory Crewdson conjures images from the debris of our domestic lives, compressing moments into mysterious and mythological spaces. The Cecil B. DeMille of American photography (if DeMille was Orson Welles), Crewdson collaborates with large crews to construct scenes that span the fissure between humdrum and heroic. Further collaboration can be found in Hover, where Crewdsons singular photos are found beside fiction by the likes of Rick Moody and Joyce Carol Oates. Jen Banbury spoke via cell with Mr. Crewdson as he descended from the north and swept into Gotham on an iron chariot.
conduit: You
construct and intimately choreograph the photographs that you make. Do you feel that,
in the course of that process, youre creating the image? Or uncovering something
thats somehow there already?
crewdson: I think its both. Im just coming back from pre-production
in Vermont. Ive been working on an idea for quite a while of this man whos
built this house out in the middle of the street and in this gesture has alienated
himself from his family and his community. So now Im in the process of location
scouting for this picture and then working with a very large team of people including
carpenters and landscapers to build this house. Its a many-staged process but
ultimately it will be as much about the process and the place that was made as it
will be about the final image. Its all coming togethera sense of reality
with artificial production.
conduit: I find that collaborative process so interesting. For instance,
you shot a series of photographs in Lee, Massachusetts. Did the towns participation
in making that work somehow affect the myth of the town itself?
crewdson: Yeah, I think so. Strange coincidencethe very next
town over is Stockbridge, Massachusetts, where Norman Rockwell painted. And I think
that his work, in a very different way, has created a very different myth for that
town. He used the people of the town to create his own myth of that place. I think
Im doing the same thing in a sense. And thats a common occurrence in
artthat transformation.