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Jonathan Green (photographer) was born on 26 September, 1939 in Massachusetts, is a photographer. Discover Jonathan Green (photographer)'s Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 84 years old?

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Age 85 years old
Zodiac Sign Libra
Born 26 September 1939
Birthday 26 September
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Nationality United States

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Jonathan Green (photographer) Net Worth

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Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
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Timeline

2022

In 2022 Harvard Magazine featured a photograph of the Wexner Center and commentary by architectural critic, Joseph Giovannini who wrote, “As culture changed, architecture changed. In or about 1983, a half dozen unusual projects embodied and expressed the cultural shifts…. A university art gallery in Columbus, Ohio…broke through the surface, semaphores of change."

2021

2021 Jonathan Green, The Idea of a Plane: Leslie J. Payne’s Vision of Flight. 30 minute film written, edited, voiced, and produced by Jonathan Green. Vimeo.com/644670308.

2016

2016 Jonathan Green, Lecture, "Two Middle East Projects by Massimiliano Gatti: In Superficie & Tell Gomel and Jerwan," Italian Cultural Institute, Washington DC, 2016

2014

2014 Jonathan Green, Essay for exhibition catalog, 100 Japanese Cameras, 1925–2014. Selections from the David Whitmire Hearst Jr. Foundation Collection, California Museum of Photography, University of California, Riverside, 2014.

2012

2012 Jonathan Green, Introduction: "The Tree in the Landscape—Fabric, Mesh, Curtain and Lattice Against the Sky." In Roots Against the Sky: Photographs by David Whitmire Hearst, Jr., UCR/California Museum of Photography, 2012. ISBN 978-0982304648

2009

2009 Jonathan Green, "Michael Elderman’s Speculative Theater of Light and Color," in Riverside’s Fox Theater: An intimate Portrait, Photographs by Michael J. Elderman, 2009 ISBN 978-0615326801

2009 Jonathan Green, "The End of Film," in The End of Film: A Brief History of Digital Cameras, 1987–2009, Selections from the David Whitmire Hearst Jr. Foundation Collection, UCR ARTSblock, University of California Riverside, October 24, 2009 — January 30, 2010.

2008

2008 Jonathan Green, "The Frame as Destiny: ‘The Four Sides of a Frame Are Among the Most Important Parts of a Picture,’ Henry Matisse," in Leica & Hasselblad, Selections from the David Whitmire Hearst Jr. Foundation Collection, UCR/California Museum of Photography, 2008. Leica & Hasselblad includes an additional essay by Colin Westerbeck.

2007

In the May 2007 Smithsonian Magazine, editor Owen Edwards wrote, “This unique trove of American folk art might have been lost had it not been for a lucky coincidence and the curiosity of an art historian. ‘Payne’s family probably thought of him as an eccentric, not an artist, so his work was neglected,’ says Smithsonian curator Portia James. ‘The hero of this story is Jonathan Green.’" In 2021 Green produced a 30 minute film: The Idea of a Plane: Leslie J. Payne’s Vision of Flight.

2006

In 2006 Green, provided written commentary on the occasion of the republication of Meyer's first CD-ROM, I Photograph to Remember. This earlier CD-ROM is a deeply moving narration that uses straight photographs to document “the complicity of tenderness” forged between Pedro and his parents, Liesel and Ernesto Meyer as Liesel and Ernesto face each other's death. In Green's essay, "The Art of Storytelling," he writes:

2006, Jonathan Green, "The Art of Storytelling: Pedro Meyer’s I Photograph to Remember."

2006 Jonathan Green, "Pop Art & Che," in Che Guevara: Revolutionary & Icon, Edited by Trisha Ziff, Abrams Image, New York, ISBN 0810957183 Similar: Che Guevara: Revolutionary & Icon, Victoria and Albert Publications, London, 2006 ISBN 1851774955. Similar: Che Guevara: Rivoluzionario e Icona, La Triennale de Milano, 2007 ISBN 978-8837055684

2005

During planning for the exhibition, a unique and important email dialogue emerged among the artists, architects, and curators. The first step of the emails was to determine if and under what terms each filmmaker would even agree to be shown side-by-side with the other filmmakers in such an exhibition: as this dialogue developed it changed not only the title of the exhibition but also the way One Ground was presented. The emails that circulated among the group became the foundation for the exhibition. As a tangible artifact, the emails, enlarged at the show's entrance, were included in full as a component of the exhibition itself. The Amsterdam theoretical research collective Public Space with A Roof (PSWAR) excerpted this email dialogue in their 2005 Reader, Relocated Identities, a publication dedicated to issues of identity and migration. Here the emails were reprinted as correlative and equal to excepts from Judith Butler’s Excitable Speech: A Politics of the Performative; Susan Sontag’s Regarding the Pain of Others; and Vilem Flusser’s The Freedom of the Migrant. In the PSWAR publication the emails can be seen as moving beyond what Judith Butler called “violent” and “excitable injurious speech,” illustrating rather Butler’s notion of an “unexpected and enabling response." The exhibition’s architectural installation was featured in the Architectural Journal 306090 of the Princeton Architectural Press, 2003, together with extended commentary and photographic documentation. The exhibition was supported by Hitachi America Ltd. And it was selected by ArtsNet as one of the 25 significant American exhibitions of Summer 2003.

Curator and scholar Trisha Ziff and Green had a long history of working together on exhibitions for the California Museum of Photography. So when Ziff came to Green with an idea to gather different versions of images based on Korda’s photograph of Che Guevara, he said, according to Ziff, “Go for it. It’s a great idea. So, we spent over a year gathering photographs, objects and posters from all over the world — including a lot of original posters from Cuba from the ’60s — and slowly this collection began to materialize." The show opened in 2005 and was instantly in demand. The exhibition was shown at eleven venues in the US and abroad. As it moved from place to place the title of the exhibition changed to reflect changes in language and culture. When the show appeared at ICP in New York, The Washington Post noted, “Cherry Guevara and other examples of what could be called Che abuse are now on display in an exhibition titled ¡Che! Revolution and Commerce. It’s the story of a single photograph and its fluky journey from contact sheet to international ubiquity and then into the farcical maw of commercial kitsch. Shot by a onetime fashion photographer named Alberto Korda, it might be, according to the show’s curators, the most reproduced image in the history of photography."

2004

The Motorcycle Diaries, 2004, with Gael Garcia Bernal as Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara

KordaVision: A Cuban Revelation, 2004, with footage of photographer Alberto Korda.

2004 Jonathan Green, "Beyond the Importance of Objects," in Jerry Burchfield, Primal Images: 100 Lumen Prints of Amazonia Flora. Center for American Places, Santa Fe and Laguna Wilderness Press, 2004. Distributed by the University of Chicago Press 2004. Foreword by Wade Davis, Introduction by Jonathan Green, Concluding essay by Jerry Burchfield. ISBN 978-1930066229

2003

In 2003 Green invited his graduate student Mitra Abbaspour to become the associate curator at the California Museum of Photography. Responding to their own family backgrounds (Green’s parents were actively Zionist, Abbaspour’s father was a devout Persian Muslim) they conceived of an interventionist exhibition that would differentiate itself from other exhibitions and endless dialogue-and-reconciliation meetings regarding the Middle East. They wished to allow instead the strength of artists’ work to suggest in visceral terms tangible human solutions that seemed unavailable in the political sphere. One Ground: 4 Palestinian & 4 Israeli Filmmakers shifted focus from documentary footage that depicts the literal events of political conflict to the presentation of metaphorical works that address the more conceptual and universal issues of exile, loss, belonging, identity, and home. One Ground included work of Avi Mograbi, B.Z. Goldberg, Elia Suleiman, Emily Jacir, Michal Rovner, Mona Hatoum, Ori Gersht, and the American premiere of Rashid Masharawi’s film Waiting. Critical to the conceptualization of this exhibition was a specifically designed architectural installation environment. Green chose a team of multinational architects who had personal ties to the region to design the installation. The team headed by Egyptian architect Mohamed Sharif and his Israeli partner Joel Blank were also finalists in a collaborative proposal for the Yitzak Rabin Peace Forum Memorial in Tel Aviv.

2003 Jonathan Green, "One Ground: Four Palestinian and Four Israeli Filmmakers" in Buildings, Movies and Brains, ArtBrain, Journal of Neuroaesthetics, 2003–2004

2003 Jonathan Green, Being Digital without Photoshop. Lecture 2003. Publication 2004, ZoneZero. Commentary on Mel Edelman, Adam Baer, Lori Nix, Tracey Moffat, and Arnie Zane.

2001

2001 Jonathan Green, "Adam[s] Meet[s] MTV," in Adam Baer: Displaced Perspectives, UCR/California Museum of Photography, 2001. With additional essays by Anthony Bannon, Annika Marie, Bill Arnig, and with an Artist’s Statement.

2000

2000 Jonathan Green, Lecture, “Discontinuous Continuities: The Pictorialism of Edward Steichen and Arnie Zane,” A multimedia lecture at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. Given in conjunction with the exhibition Edward Steichen. November 2000.

1999

1999 Jonathan Green, Continuous Replay: The Photographs of Arnie Zane, MIT Press, Cambridge, 1999. With an introduction by Bill T. Jones and essays and commentary by Jonathan Green, Susan Leigh Foster, Christine Pichini, Bill Bissell, Robert Longo, Philip Sykas, and Lois Welk. Pages 204. Designed by Jonathan Green and Wendy Brown. American Museum Association: Second Place Museum Catalog of the Year, 1999. ISBN 978-0262571272

1998

1998 Jonathan Green, "The LA Project, Sightings of the Marvelous and Extraordinary," in Douglas McCulloh, Chance Encounters: The L.A. Project, Riverside, California: University of California/California Museum of Photography ISBN 978-0966693607

1998 Jonathan Green, "Aperture in the Fifties: The Word and the Way," in Photography 1900 to the Present, An anthology of critical writings by Diana Emery Hulick with Joseph Marshall. Excerpts from Chapter 4, American Photography: A Critical History 1945–1980. Prentice-Hall, 1998. ISBN 0132540959

1997

El Che: Investigating a Legend, 1997, with Che seen on archive footage

1995

In The New York Times, dance critic Ann Daly wrote, “The show and catalogue, organized and edited by the museum’s director, Jonathan Green, comprise an extraordinary recovery project that fundamentally changes the way we understand ‘the other half’ of the Jones-Zane collaboration. Mr. Zane was a dancer neither by nature nor formal education, but he contributed more to the company's esthetic than may have been previously apparent." This project has been made possible by the support of the Andy Warhol Foundation, the MIT Press, the Pittsburg Dance Council, the Dance Critics Association, the Three Rivers Arts Festival, Tony Culver, and UCR which provided two residencies for Bill T. Jones at the university in 1995 and 1996. Continuous Replay: The Photographs of Arnie Zane was the Winner of the American Museum Association Second Place Museum Catalog of the Year, 1999, and was listed in The New York Times as one of the best photography books of 1999.

1995 Jonathan Green, "So Bland a Notion of Beauty as Perfection," in The Garden of Earthly Delights: Photographs by Edward Weston and Robert Mapplethorpe. Edited with an essay by Jonathan Green. UCR/California Museum of Photography,1995. Curated by Mark Johnstone and Jonathan Green. Additional essays by Irene Borger, Mark Johnstone, Shelley Rice and Mike Weaver. Designed by Jonathan Green and Wendy Brown. Chosen by Art in America: Books for Collector’s Library.

1995 Pedro Meyer, Truths & Fictions: A Journey from Documentary to Digital Photography. (Pedro Meyer: Verdades y Ficciones: Un Viaje de la Fotografia Documental a la Digital), CD-ROM. Audio essay by Jonathan Green. Disk in English and Spanish. Voyager, New York 1995.

1994

1994 Jonathan Green, "Extraphotographic Reality," End Paper Section, The Chronicle of Higher Education, October 12, 1994.

1994 Jonathan Green, "Pedro Meyer’s Documentary Fictions," in Metamorphoses: Photography in the Electronic Age. Aperture, 136, Summer 1994. ISBN 978-0893816025

1993

In 1993 Meyer’s exhibition Truths & Fictions / Verdades y Ficciones: A Journey from Documentary to Digital Photography opened at California Museum of Photography. It then traveled through 1997 to Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago, Illinois; Museo de Artes Visuales Alejandro Otero, Caracas, Venezuela; Impressions Gallery, York, England; Rencontres Internationales de Photographie, Arles, France; The Mexican Museum, San Francisco, California; Center of the Image, Mexico City; Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; Museum of South Texas, Corpus Christi; and Houston Center for Photography, Texas. Green provided audio commentary on the Voyager CD-ROM that accompanied the exhibition. Truths & Fictions was supported by grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the US-Mexico fund for Culture.

1993 Jonathan Green, "Las verdades y ficciones en la obra de Pedro Meyer," El National, Mexico City, November 22, 1993. Edited version of CD-ROM essay.

1993 Jonathan Green, "Verdades y Ficciones, Un viaje a la fotografía digital," in Verdades y Ficciones, Museo de Artes Visualles Alejandro Otero, Caracas, 1993. Edited version of CD-ROM essay.

1993 Three Texts on the Work of Rudolf Baranik, Donald Kuspit, Rudolf Baranik, Lucy Lippard, Jonathan Green, William Olander. Published by Bee Sting Press, 1993.

1991

1991 Jonathan Green, "California Photography," Voice over narration for New California Photography, Amsterdam Cultural Television, Amsterdam, Holland, 1991.

1991 Jonathan Green, "Instinct, Reason, and Experience: Evidence of Reality," Photoworks by Ten American Artists. Introduction to exhibition catalog. Leusden, Netherlands: Uitgeverij Foto 1991.

1991 Jonathan Green, "5 Celebrations of Leslie J. Payne," in Leslie Payne: Visions of Flight. Exhibition catalog. Wexner Center for the Arts, January 1991.

1991 Jonathan Green, "Leslie Payne: Visions of Flight - A Reconstruction," Folk Art Messenger, vol. 4, no. 3, Spring 1991.

1990

In 1990 Green became Professor of Art and Art History and the Director of the California Museum of Photography at the University of California, Riverside. At UCR choreographer, dance scholar, and chair of the UCR Riverside dance department Susan Leigh Foster introduced Green to choreographer and dancer Bill T. Jones. Jones and Arnie Zane were partners in life and were the co-artistic directors of the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company. Zane was a photographer before he became a dancer and choreographer and he explored in his photographs what would become the preoccupation of his dance work as well: the human body, its gestures, postures and movement. Zane died of AIDS-related lymphoma in 1988 at the age of 39. Before his death Jones promised Zane that he would find a way to publish and exhibit Zane’s photographs. Green met with Jones, reviewed Zane’s photographs and was honored to undertake a book and exhibition of Zane’s work.

When Green first came to California in 1990 he met the Mexican photographer Pedro Meyer who was living part of each year in Los Angeles. Meyer by 1990 had begun to create a new genre of photography that used Photoshop and other digital programs to synthesize in a single documentary photograph an apparently single moment in time, a moment which was actually highly manipulated, seamed together and derived from many images. Green was fascinated with Meyer’s reinterpretation of Cartier-Bresson’s Decisive Moment into Meyer’s Digital Moment and offered to curate a major exhibition of Meyer’s work. Green wrote:

1989

Before the Wexner Center opened in November 1989 Green devised a sequence of heraldic Wexner Center Preview events, including a pyrotechnic display by artist Dennis Oppenheim, a collaborative installation by sculptor Richard Serra and composer Philip Glass entitled Pink Noise, which accompanied the Philip Glass Ensemble performance of Glass’s 5 hour long Music in Twelve Parts, and a performance event, 12 and ¼ degrees, in which Elise Bernhardt, artistic director of New York’s Dancing in the Streets, was invited to Columbus to produce a performance that would introduce the community to this new unconventional structure. Here local dancers joined nationally known choreographers Ellen Cornfield, John Giffin, Elizabeth Streb, Stephan Koplowitz, and Susan Hadley with musical performances by accordionist Guy Klucevsek, William Larkin, and Thomas Wells. And iron workers who climbed the building during the day became dancers at the event, emphasizing the idea of the construction site and the new building as laboratory and theater. These preview events were supported by a grant from the Skidmore Owings & Merrill Foundation; The Ohio Arts Council’s New Works Program; and the Celia and Mark Tuttle Exhibition Fund of the University Gallery of Fine Art.

1989 Jonathan Green, "Algorithms for Discovery," in Wexner Center for the Visual Arts, The Ohio State University, Rizzoli, 1989. With critical essays by Rafael Moneo and Anthony Vidler. And essays by Robert Stearns, Director of the Wexner Center for the Visual Arts and Jonathan Green, Founding Project Director, Wexner Center for the Visual Arts. Includes a portfolio of photographs of the construction of the Wexner Center by James Friedman. ISBN 0847811158

1989 Jonathan Green, "The Photo Constructions of Jean Ruiter," in Jean Ruiter: PhotoWorks, Haarlem, The Netherlands. Another version published in Jean Ruiter Archive, Amsterdam.

1987

1987 Jonathan Green, Edited with an Introduction. Rudolf Baranik, Elegies: Sleep Napalm Night Sky. The Ohio State University Gallery of Fine Art and St. Martin’s Press, New York, 1987. With an essay by Donald Kuspit and a memoir by the artist.

1987 Pink Noise: Three Conversations Concerning an Acoustic Installation: Philip Glass, Richard Serra, Kurt Munacsi. Jonathan Green, editor. The Ohio State University Gallery of Fine Art, 1987. Designed by Jonathan Green and Wendy Brown. A Wexner Center for the Arts Preview Event.

1986

1986 Jonathan Green, Lecture, "The Sacred and the Profane: Edward Weston's Descriptive Strategies," Edward Weston Centennial Symposium, The Friends of Photography, Carmel, California, April 18–20, 1986.

1985

Once Eisenman’s design was selected, Green worked closely with the architect during the design development phase including traveling to Germany with Eisenman to carefully evaluate several highly lauded new museums: Richard Meier’s Frankfurt Museum of Applied Arts (1985) and Abteiberg Museum in Mönchengladbach by Hans Hollein (1982). In 1987 Dean Brokema wrote, “For the past several years Jonathan has maintained a vital gallery program that has achieved recognition for its adventurous planning and for its imaginative combination of both arts and sociological commentary. Further Jonathan has been superb during the time of design development, following a beautifully developed design competition. He has given countless hours to the process of monitoring the evolution of the final plans for the building." In recognition of his input, Green was invited to share the stage with Peter Eisenman and Richard Trott when the Wexner Center received the 32nd Annual Progressive Architecture Design Award in 1985.

1985 Jonathan Green, "Straight Shooting in America" in 1985 Photography Annual, Ziff-Davis Publishing, New York. Reprint of Chapter 7, American Photography: A Critical History 1945–1980.

1985 Jonathan Green, American Photography in the 1950s: ‘Anybody Doesn’t Like These Pitchers Don’t Like Potry, See?’" in American Images: Photography 1945–1980, Barbican Art Gallery, Penguin Books, Middlesex, England, 1985. Edited by Peter Turner. Text amalgamated from Chapters 4 and 5 from American Photography: A Critical History 1945–1980. ISBN 978-0140079883

1985 Jonathan Green, Lecture, "An Eastern View of the Western Documentary Aesthetic," Part of the series New Discussions on Documentary Photography: Challenges in Meaning, The Oakland Museum of California.

1985 Jonathan Green, Lecture, "Paul Strand: The Range of Expression, 1914–1976," Huntington Galleries, Huntington, West Virginia.

1984

1984 Jonathan Green, "Housing a Program: Architecture as Logic, Architecture as Symbol," in A Center for the Visual Arts: The Ohio State University Competition, Edited by Peter Arnell and Ted Bickford, Rizzoli, 1984. ISBN 084780528X. With additional essays by Kurt Forster, Alan Colquhoun, Richard Miller, Edward W. Wolner, and Patricia J. Wuichet.

1984 Jonathan Green, American Photography: A Critical History 1945–1980. Harry N. Abrams, 1984. Pictures selected and sequenced by Jonathan Green and James Friedman. 332 illustrations, 242 pages. Nikon Book of the Year, 1984. Recipient of the Benjamin Citation, 1986, from the American Photographic Historical Society in recognition of achievement in photographic history. ISBN 978-0810918146

1983

1983 Jonathan Green, "James Friedman: Rephotographing the History of The World," in James Friedman: Color Photographs 1979–1982, The Ohio State University Gallery of Fine Art.

1982

In 1982, Green and Dean of the College of the Arts, Andrew Broekema, received permission from OSU’s President, Edward Jennings, to plan for a new arts center. Green laid out concepts for the center in a document titled “OSU/Art.” Green worked closely with faculty committees and with Richard Miller, Professor of Architecture, who developed options for a national architectural competition and whose students explored campus locations and potential design strategies. As Marcus noted in the panel discussion for To Begin, Again, "Green played a leading role in the ...buildup to the Wex. [He] was preparing the way for this new expansive paradigm breaking architectural project. But at the same time, he led an exhibition program...that really bears his thumbprint." Green and the university issued a national request for architectural submissions. Five finalists were chosen in October 1982. By then Green’s “OSU/Art” had expanded into a full program of requirements that called for a bold building to house an ambitious multidisciplinary contemporary arts center. The program read in part:

1982 Jonathan Green, Lecture, "The New Color," Columbus Museum of Art, Columbus Ohio.

1981

In 1981 Green was appointed director of Ohio State University Gallery following Betty Collings, under whose leadership the gallery received broad visibility for its collection of major contemporary artists. Green greatly respected Collings, but as, Daniel Marcus, Wexner Curator writes in the 2022 Wexner catalog To Begin, Again: A Prehistory of the Wex, 1968–89:

1981 Jonathan Green, "Minor White at MIT," Positive, Creative Photography Laboratory, MIT.

1980

With a team from the OSU Gallery, Green rediscovered, recovered and restored one of the remaining biplanes and other airfield paraphernalia which at Payne’s death in 1980 had been left to disintegrate in the sun, rain, and salt-water spray of Chesapeake Bay. The Log Books were found in several art collections. The team then spent several years restoring the artifacts. Though Flight was not the opening Wexner Center exhibition, Green’s hope for a Payne exhibition at the Wexner ultimately came to pass in 1991 with the exhibition Leslie Payne: Visions of Flight, an exhibition Green first curated at the California Museum of Photography. 5 Celebrations of Leslie J. Payne, an exhibition catalogue with text by Green was published by the Wexner. The restored plane and related artifacts were also shown at the California Science Center, Los Angeles in 2001 and at the Visionary Art Museum, Baltimore. In 1994, Green assisted the Anacostia Museum at the Smithsonian Institution in permanently acquiring Payne's work. At the Smithsonian Leslie Payne’s constructions remain as a part of the museum’s holdings and a powerful statement on imagination, race, and identity in America. Green wrote in the Wexner exhibition Catalog:

Continuous Replay and its related exhibition grew out of an extended collaboration between six people who admired Zane’s dance and photography: Bill T. Jones, Bill Bissell, Phil Sykas Christine Pichini, Susan Foster, and Green. They were aided by conversations with Lois Welk, Arnie and Bill’s early colleague at the American Dance Asylum, and artist Robert Longo who was often Bill and Arnie’s collaborator in the 1980s. The book was co-designed by Green and Wendy Brown.

1979

As Green approached the opening of the Wexner Center, he considered an inaugural exhibition that would resonate with the architecture and dynamism of the new building. Green conceived of an exhibition around of the theme of Flight and began to seek out both art and experiments at the intersection of science and art. He spoke to the Belgium artist Panamarenko about his aeroplanes and visited MIT to see the student team producing the Daedalus, a human powered airplane. Green considered as well using a work already in the OSU collection, Dennis Oppenheim’s 1979 Saturn Updraft. Green was also introduced at this time by curator Patricia Brincefield to the work of Leslie Payne, a Black self-taught artist and sculptor who had constructed on his tidewater land in Virginia an ‘imitation’ airfield with full-size ‘imitations’ of World War I era biplanes. Payne conceived of his planes not as static models but as a performance piece: he would not only drive the planes around his airfield (they were equipped with engines but they never lifted off the ground) but would also take Polaroid snapshots of the young women who came to take imaginary journeys in the planes. These Polaroids would be combined with texts of the journeys written by the young women and then placed into Payne’s Airplane Machine Shop Log Book.

1979 Jonathan Green, "Aperture in the 50’s: The Word and the Way," Afterimage, Vol 6, No 8, March 1979. This text would later be used as the basis of Chapter 4 in American Photography: A Critical History 1945–1980.

1979 Renato Danese, Editor, American Images: New Work by Twenty Contemporary Photographers, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1979. ISBN 0070152950. Robert Adams, Lewis Baltz, Harry Callahan, William Clift, Linda Connor, Bevan Davies, Roy DeCarava, William Eggleston, Elliott Erwin, Larry Fink, Frank Gohlke, John Gossage, Jonathan Green, Jan Groover, Mary Ellen Mark, Joel Meyerowitz, Richard Misrach, Nicholas Nixon, Tod Papageorge, Stephen Shore. Includes a statement by each photographer.

1979 "Introduction to Camera Work" in The Camera Viewed/Writings on Twentieth-Century Photography, Volume 1: Photography Before World War II, Edited by Peninah Petruck, E.P. Dutton, 1979. Reprinted from Camera Work: A Critical Anthology. ISBN 0525475354

1978

1978 Jonathan Green, "Photography as Popular Culture," Journal of the University Film Association, Vol 30, No 4, Fall, 1978.

1978 Jonathan Green, Lecture, "Minor White, Robert Frank and the Beats", Wellesley College. A follow-up to the 1975 Wellesley symposium: Photography within the Humanities.

1976

Green joined the Photography and Cinema faculty at The Ohio State University in 1976, teaching and directing the department’s small Silver Image Gallery. Before he left MIT, Green was approached by James Raimes of Oxford University Press and encouraged to write a book about American photography. Green visualized the book as a series of essays that would begin by establishing a pantheon of American masters (O'Sullivan, Stieglitz, Strand, Evans, Weston, Adams, Steichen) who would define a series of archetypal relationships between photography and the American imagination. The book would identify the dominant forces and the leading figures within each decade and place these photographers—and artists who used photographs, including among others Robert Rauschenberg and Andy Warhol—within the context of America’s constantly changing social, political, media, and artistic landscape. The illustrative images in the book would not be presented in traditional portfolio form but rather—in a provocative move—would act as a running commentary across the middle of each page of the book. Green collaborated with photographer James Friedman to produce these juxtapositions of photographs. The publication of the book was supported by a grant from the Polaroid Corporation.

1976 Jonathan Green, "Paul Strand, Obituary", University Film Study Center Newsletter, Vol 6, No 5, June 1976.

1975

Yet the reception to The Snapshot was not universally positive. Martha Rosler, whose art and criticism focuses upon issues of politics, class, and gender, wrote, "This collection, mostly of photographers’ work with short accompanying remarks, has almost nothing to do with snapshots and represents another step in the attempt by Minor White and others to assimilate all photographs to their particular techno-mystified version of photographic history." And while White was totally behind the project through publication, once it appeared, he drew back. In March, 1975, he wrote to a member of Aperture's board of directors, "I am in rather close contact with a couple of score of...photographers and they have expressed a deep concern over the Snapshot issue....They appreciated the fact that Aperture was attempting to expand and at the same time, felt a loss of contact with their source of inspiration. I am committed to...expanding our audience...but always with our central core related to the esoteric firmly fixed."

1974

At MIT Green collaborated with White on White’s biannual themes shows, Celebrations, Being Without Clothes, and the controversial Octave of Prayer. At this time Green was also appointed to the position of Associate Editor of Aperture. In 1974 White retired from teaching at MIT and Green was chosen acting director of the Creative Photography Lab. To continue to broaden the sensibility of the Lab’s staff, Green invited photographers Tod Papageorge, whom he had met while working on the Snapshot, and Melissa Shook, who recently had been shown at New York’s Museum of Modern Art and Metropolitan Museum of Art to join the teaching team which now also included Peter Laytin.

1974 Jonathan Green, The Snapshot, Edited with an Introduction, Aperture, Millerton NY, also Aperture, Vol 19, Number 1. 1974. 128 pp. Additional essays by Lisette Model, Tod Papageorge, Steven Halpern, Walker Evans, John A. Kouwenhoven, Judith Wechsler, Paul Strand. Portfolios by Bill Zulpo-Dane, Emmet Gowin, Garry Winogrand, Gus Kayafas, Henry Wessel, Jr, Joel Meyerowitz, Lee Friedlander, Nancy Rexroth, Richard Albertine, Robert Frank, Tod Papageorge, and Wendy Snyder MacNeil. Chosen by the New York Type Directors Club for Awards Exhibition at the American Institute of Graphic Arts. ISBN 0912334576

1974 Celebrations: An Exhibition of Original Photographs, Selection and texts by Minor White and Jonathan Green, preface by Gyorgy Kepes, Hayden Gallery, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge. An Aperture Book, New York, 1974. p. 96. ISBN 0912334576

1973

Camera Work: A Critical Anthology was awarded the Art Librarians Society of North America’s Publishing Award for Best Art Book of 1973. They called it, “A perfect book… based on quality of binding, typography and paper, excellence of bibliographical apparatus such as indices and bibliography, and the quality and placement of illustrations.” Hilton Kramer in the New York Times Book Review wrote, “The volume which Jonathan Green has now assembled is exemplary in every respect. His introductory essay and his lengthy notes, together with his painstaking indexes and other editorial apparatus, are a model of what a book of this sort should be—a prefect guide not only to a crucial publication but to a career and a period.” And Peter Bunnell, in the Print Collector’s Newsletter wrote, “Green clarifies the vision behind the publication and the virtues and failings of the movement it documented. His period breakdown of the magazine’s contents is insightful…The format is superb…With the publication of Green’s book, one major area of study in the field is in book form.”

In his essay “What is a Laboratory?” in To Begin Again on the precedents for the Wexner Center, historian and editor Julian Myers-Szupinska points out Green's relationship to the laboratory model: "Jonathan W. Green, the second director of Ohio State’s University Gallery of Fine Art and a driving force behind the Wexner Center’s statement of purpose, had published an anthology of Stieglitz’s journal, Camera Work, in 1973; he was intimately aware of 291’s laboratory model and was likely recalling it deliberately in the statement.”

1973 Dorothy Norman, Alfred Stieglitz: An American Seer, Random House, 1973. pp. 256. Book Jacket text by Jonathan Green. .mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit;word-wrap:break-word}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"\"""\"""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation:target{background-color:rgba(0,127,255,0.133)}.mw-parser-output .id-lock-free a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:linear-gradient(transparent,transparent),url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/65/Lock-green.svg")right 0.1em center/9px no-repeat}.mw-parser-output .id-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .id-lock-registration a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:linear-gradient(transparent,transparent),url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg")right 0.1em center/9px no-repeat}.mw-parser-output .id-lock-subscription a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:linear-gradient(transparent,transparent),url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg")right 0.1em center/9px no-repeat}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:linear-gradient(transparent,transparent),url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg")right 0.1em center/12px no-repeat}.mw-parser-output .cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:none;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;color:#d33}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{color:#d33}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#3a3;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right{padding-right:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .citation .mw-selflink{font-weight:inherit}ISBN 0893810363

1973 Ben Maddow, Edward Weston: Fifty Years, The definitive volume of his photographic work. An illustrated biography. Aperture, 1973. p. 285. Book Jacket text by Jonathan Green. ISBN 091233438X

1973 Jonathan Green, Book Jacket copy for Frederick Evans, Aperture, 1973.

1973 Jonathan Green, Book Jacket copy for Julia Margaret Cameron, Aperture, 1973.

1973 Jonathan Green, Camera Work: A Critical Anthology, Aperture, Millerton, N.Y.1973. Plates 102, pp. 376. With Biographies, Bibliography, Indices. Art Librarians Society of North America Publishing Award: Best Art Book of 1973. ISBN 0912334738

1972

1972 Jonathan Green, Book Jacket text for Light 7, Aperture 1972.

1972 Jonathan Green, Book Jacket text for Octave of Prayer, Aperture 1972.

1972 Jonathan Green and Louise Green, Letter to New York Times, Art Mailbag. Comment on Gene Thornton's review of Danny Lyon's Conversations with the Dead with Thornton's reply.

1971

1971 Jonathan Green, "Adams, Evans, Shahn & Co.," Boston After Dark, November 23, 1971.

1971 Jonathan Green, "Bruce Davidson’s East 100th Street," Aperture 6:1 Winter, 1971

1970

In the early 1970s MIT Creative Photograph Laboratory instructor Ron MacNeil began to experiment with the printing press as an extension of the darkroom. Because White was convinced that photo chemicals and printing ink did not mix, Green urged MacNeil to find a venue across the street from the Photo Lab in the Department of Architecture’s allotted space. Here MacNeil was able to set up a full-size printing press and with newly gained knowledge of computer programming tie the press to digital devices and high-resolution screens. In the process of giving workshops at his new facility MacNeil invited acclaimed MIT Press graphic designer Muriel Cooper to review student work. Cooper was fascinated by MacNeil’s project and wanted to stay. She had always pursued an examination of graphic production in multiple media. She thought MacNeil’s workshop should be her new home. Green also knew Cooper from having worked with her on the logo for the Photo Lab. Together, as co-founders of a new project, Cooper, MacNeil, and Green, at Cooper's suggestion, designated the new enterprise the “Visible Language Workshop.” The VLW is now recognized as a pioneering institution that helped changed the landscape of electronic communication. Green became the administrative director of the group and helped seek funding and support. Green also joined with Patricia Cumming of the Creative Writing Section of the Department of Humanities to host a new course out of VLW, “Words and Images." In 1985 the Visible Language Workshop, the MIT Architecture Machine Group, and the Center for Advanced Visual Studies (CAVS) were combined to form the now renowned MIT Media Lab.

1968

When Green was at Harvard a classmate introduced him to Minor White who had recently been invited by MIT to start a new photography program. While working for Ezra Stoller in Mamaroneck, Green began to submit articles for White’s Quarterly journal of photography, Aperture. In 1968 White learned that he could add another teacher to the Creative Photo Laboratory, which was a division of MIT’s School of Architecture on the condition that the new instructor could teach architectural photography. White invited Green to apply and in fall 1968 Green was hired at MIT.

1968 Jonathan Green, "The Photographs of Harry Callahan," Aperture 14:2, Winter, 1968.

1967

In 1967 Green moved to Mamaroneck, New York, to work with architectural photographer Ezra Stoller. During his time with Stoller and then later on-his-own in Boston, Green photographed projects for a range of noteworthy architects and firms including Acorn Structures; Benjamin Thompson; Cambridge 7 Associates; Donlyn Lyndon; Edward Larrabee Barnes; Haines, Lundberg & Waehler; Hugh Stubbins; J. Timothy Anderson; Paul Rudolf; Richard Meier; and The Architects Collaborative. Green was also commissioned in the early 70s by the Philadelphia Museum of Art to document installations of their photography exhibitions, including exhibitions by Paul Strand, Minor White, and Jerry Uelsmann.

1967 Jonathan Green, "The Daybooks of Edward Weston," Aperture 13:2, Fall, 1967.

1965

In 1965 based on a series of high contrast photographs Green had made in Israel and Europe, Peter Chermayeff and Lou Bakanowsky of the architectural firm Cambridge Seven Associates commissioned Green along with photographer Len Gittleman to take photographs to be installed as large-scale silkscreen, porcelain enamel, black and white murals for Cambridge Seven Associates’ newly renovated 1967 Boston MBTA stations at Copley, Arlington, and Park. These murals showed iconic buildings and landscapes surrounding each station such as the Arlington Street Church and the Boston Public Gardens. They were on view for over 20 years.

1961

Having dealt with a historical photographic classic, Green next turned to contemporary photographers with the intent of expanding Aperture’s traditional audience. Green asked White to allow him to generate an issue for the Quarterly based not on renowned photographers but on the snapshot. White was certainly equivocal about supporting forms of photography that were not abstract, meditative, or spiritually expressive. White had written, for example, that William Klein "did not photograph a city: he matched with cheap sensational photography the vulgarity of life in all its ugliness." Nonetheless, in 1961, when few other American publishers would touch Robert Frank's The Americans, White agreed to publish three photographs from The Americans in an issue of Aperture that also published 13 earlier Frank photographs. In 1973 White gave Green his blessings and The Snapshot, was released in 1974 both as a Quarterly issue and in book form. It contained portfolios and commentary by photographers never before seen in Aperture such as Garry Winogrand and Lee Friedlander, as well as Robert Frank, who showed his Polaroid ‘snapshots.’ The book also included commentary on the snapshot by Paul Strand and Lisette Model, plastic Diana camera photos by Nancy Rexroth, and family photographs by Wendy Snyder MacNeil and Emmet Gowin, to name just a few. The first line of Green’s introduction states: “The word snapshot is the most ambiguous, controversial word in photography since the word art.” In Newsweek, Douglas Davis wrote, “The Snapshot exhaustively documents the symbiotic link between the work of our finest photographers and their first experience of photography—through the family album snapshot." Margaret Weiss in the Saturday Review wrote, “A provocative anthology…Be it ever so humble, the home snapshot has come a long way, baby!” In the journal Exposure Dru Shipman wrote, “What is at issue in this book—and it is a debate carried on politely by the word but with undiplomatic plainness in the pictures—is the transformation of something into a graven image.” The Snapshot also became the impetus behind Janet Malcolm’s collection of essays Diana & Nikon: Essays on the Aesthetic of Photography, 1980. In Malcolm’s essay “On Real and Fake Snapshots,” written as a memoir late in her life, Malcolm teases Green: “In his introduction, the editor, Jonathan Green, felt impelled to inform the reader that the photographers represented in the book were ‘not snapshooters but sophisticated photographers.’ The most sophisticated among them, perhaps, was Rexroth, who used a $1.50 toy camera called the Diana (thus my title) that also came in a model that squirted water when you pressed the shutter.”

1960

As a freshman at MIT in May 1960, Green was awarded third place in the MIT-wide Boit Essay Prize competition for a study of three poems by Dylan Thomas. In Spring 1964 his translation from the Hebrew of Fahrenheim by Shmuel Yosef Agnon was published in the Harvard-Radcliffe literary magazine Mosiac. After taking a workshop with Minor White he began to write for Aperture Quarterly, publishing commentaries on the Daybooks of Edward Weston, 1967; Harry Callahan’s El Mochuelo and MOMA monographs, 1968; and Bruce Davidson’s East 100th Street, 1971.

1958

Green grew up in Shaker Heights, Ohio, and attended Shaker Heights public schools. He studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1958–1960; Hebrew University, Jerusalem, 1960–61; Brandeis University, Near Eastern and Judaic Studies and English Literature, BA, Phi Beta Kappa, Magna Cum Laude 1963; Harvard University, English Literature, as a Danforth Fellow, AM, 1967. He taught with photographer Minor White at MIT from 1968–1976, becoming acting director of the MIT Creative Photography Laboratory and Gallery at White’s retirement; then Professor of Photography and Cinema and Founding Project Director Wexner Center for the Arts, Ohio State University, 1976–1990; followed by Professor of the History of Art and Photography, and director of the California Museum of Photography and executive director, UCR ARTSblock, University of California, Riverside, 1990–2015.

1945

When American Photography: A Critical History 1945–1980 was published in 1984 it was widely reviewed in periodicals including Newsweek, Los Angeles Times, Artweek, The New Criterion and the photographic journals Afterimage, Photo-Eye, and Exposure. It was awarded the American Photographic Historical Society’s 1986 Benjamin Citation for achievement in photographic history and was chosen as the 1984 Nikon Book of the Year. Chapters were reprinted in Afterimage, American Images (England), and the 1985 Photography Annual. Excerpts were presented as essays on the website Masters of Photography. As recently as 2021, 37 years after its publication, professor of the history of photography and theory, Mary Warner Marien wrote in Photography: A Cultural History that American Photography is "still influential for its taxonomy of postwar photography."

When the book was published, the art critic Joan Murray, wrote in Artweek, “This book has been waiting to be written. This history of American photography from 1945 to the present has not been dealt with substantially before this provocative and interesting survey by Jonathan Green....There is such a volume of material that even organizing it into chapter headings deserves a merit award. What Green gives us is a vantage point from which to view the era. His research and knowledge contribute to his ability to challenge the reader to see the complexities in somewhat simplified form. American Photography is very readable and certainly needed. It is a valuable addition to photographic literature." Jed Perl wrote in The New Criterion, "In American Photography, Jonathan Green has set out to describe what has happened in the last half-century among photographers and the publications and institutions with which they are involved....Green has, I think, gotten the emphasis right: if the photographers he talks about seem at times overshadowed by all the other things — the magazines, museums, and ideas this is probably a fair picture of a period during which photography has been accepted, generally, as creative art." The language, prose style and verbal accessibility of American Photography was widely lauded. Art critic Lauren Smith wrote, "The text is polished…Green is eloquent and unabashedly straightforward in his assessment…Green's commentary often flows with wonderful grace." Critic, novelist and theorist James Hugunin, who frequently disagreed with Green's assessments, nonetheless writes in Exposure, "Green’s discussion is highly intelligent and often insightful. I enjoyed his style of writing, and the discussion never becomes boring, never lapses into mere jargon." Therese Heyman, Senior Curator Oakland Museum, commented to Green, "In the swollen tide of literature in photography your 1984 American Photography stands out to me as the book I most enjoyed reading, finally wishing I had written a chapter of it myself."

1939

Jonathan Green (born September 26, 1939) is an American writer, historian of photography, curator, teacher, museum administrator, photographer, filmmaker and the founding Project Director of the Wexner Center for the Arts. A recognized authority on the history of American photography, Green’s books Camera Work: A Critical Anthology (1973) and American Photography: A Critical History 1945–1980 (1984) are two notable commentaries and frequently referenced and republished accounts in the field of photography. At the same time Green’s acquisitions, exhibitions and publications consistently drew from the edges of established photographic practice rather than from its traditional center. He supported acquisitions by socially activist artists like Adrian Piper and graffiti artist Furtura 2000, and hosted exhibitions on Rape, AIDS, new feminist art, and the work of photographer, choreographer and dancer Arnie Zane, the Diana camera images of Nancy Rexroth, the Polaroids and imitation biplanes of folk artist Leslie Payne, and the digital photographic work of Mexican photographer Pedro Meyer. This alternative focus help prime Green and the competition jury to choose an unconventional, deconstructive architect, Peter Eisenman, previously known primarily as a teacher and theorist, as the architect for the Wexner Center for the Arts. Green has held professorial and directorial positions at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Ohio State University, and University of California, Riverside.

1930

Jonathan Green was born to Jewish parents in Troy, New York, where his father held his first rabbinical pulpit. His father, Rabbi Alan. S. Green was a prominent reform rabbi active in the reform leadership organization known for his contributions to the reform movement’s liturgy, and for his popularization of rabbinical thought in such books as Sex, God, and the Sabbath, The Mystery of Jewish Marriage. Green's mother, Frances, was a social worker who while in Palestine in the mid 1930s worked with Henrietta Szold in Youth Aliya.

The UCR California Museum of Photography is housed in a 1930 Kress Dime store, remodeled and repurposed by architect Stanley Saitowitz in 1990. Ten years later Green and the dean of UCR College of Arts and Humanities, Patricia O’Brien, initiated a historic renovation and reuse project in the adjacent 1895 Rouse Department Store, whose original architect J. Stanley Wilson was one of the architects of Riverside’s historic Mission Inn. The Rouse Department Store, which had been sitting vacant for many years, contained a period façade, freestanding display cases in the glass entry arcade and a magnificent two-story, skylit atrium. Its architectural presence and extensive square footage provided the freedom to expand the photography museum and provide additional facilities for arts programming. The building also provided space to rehouse the museum’s Keystone-Mast stereo plate collection. Green, working with a faculty committee, developed the program of requirements for the renovation and reuse of the building. This new facility, known as the Culver Center of the Arts, was positioned in Green’s words to “to provide a cultural presence, educational resource, community center, and intellectual meeting ground for the university and the community.” As he had done with Peter Eisenman at the Wexner Center, Green worked closely with the architect, Annie Chu of Chu-Gooding, both during design development as well as during the actual construction of the new space. The project was awarded the City of Riverside Beautification Award, 2011, and the AIA Inland Empire Citation Award, 2011.

1903

White and Aperture managing editor and publisher Michael Hoffman encouraged Green to consider a larger project than the short articles he had previously submitted. Aperture had begun to publish books as well as the Quarterly, and they suggested Green prepare a careful study of Stieglitz’s magazine, Camera Work, 1903–1917. Green spent many hours in the Boston Public Library reviewing original issues of Camera Work and conceived of a sumptuous book that would translate the spirt of the original format into contemporary terms. He goal was to reveal how Stieglitz’s periodical “helped transformed he artistic sensibility of the nineteenth century into the artistic awareness of the present day.” Green and Hoffman worked with designer Stephen Korbet and typographer Herb Lubalin to achieve the final look. The publication was supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Florence V. Burden Foundation.