Born 1971 in Jerusalem, Elinor Carucci graduated in 1995 from Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design with a degree in photography. Her work has been included in numerous exhibitions worldwide, including in solo shows at Edwynn Houk Gallery, Fifty One Fine Art Photography Gallery, Fotomuseum Antwerp, and Gagosian Gallery, London, among others, and in group shows at the Museum of Modern Art, MoCP Chicago, and the Photographers' Gallery, London. Her photographs are included in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the Brooklyn Museum, the International Center of Photography, Houston Museum of Fine Arts, and the Haifa Museum of Art. Her work has appeared in the New Yorker, New York Times Magazine, Details, Wired, Men's Health, New York, W, People, Aperture, ARTnews, and numerous other publications. Carucci was awarded the ICP Infinity Award in 2001, the Guggenheim Fellowship in 2002, and was named the NYFA Fellow in Photography in 2010. This is her fourth monograph, after Closer (Chronicle, 2002/2009), Diary of a Dancer (SteidlMack, 2005), and Mother (Prestel, 2013). Carucci teaches at the graduate program of Photography and Related Media at School of Visual Arts and is represented by Edwynn Houk Gallery in New York and Fifty One Fine Art Photography Gallery, Belgium.
With her first book, 2002's Closer, Elinor Carucci brought
us into her life and took us into her confidence, trusting viewers
to understand that a certain amount of nakedness, both physical and
emotional, was no big deal in her extended family. . . . She
continues that invigorating, illuminating push and pull in her new
book, Midlife (Monacelli), combining it with what she
describes in the book's afterword as a particular, very
up-close--almost scientific--way of seeing. . . . In one of several
images that hark back to Closer, the couple lay naked and
side-by-side in bed, Elinor in the foreground, Eran peering at us
from behind the crook of her neck. But instead of looking away,
contented and abstracted, as she did in 1998, Elinor has turned her
head to look out at us, too, with an expression that's older,
wiser, and slightly ironic. Life goes on. And on.
--Vince Aletti, Photograph
In Midlife, a deeply personal project spanning a
7-year time scale, Carucci presents her journey through motherhood,
marriage, illness, love and ageing. Tracking the day-to-day
dynamics of family life and the highs and lows of relationships,
the book mixes candid snapshots with surreal and staged scenes.
Interspersed with abstract paintings created in blood, Carucci
creates a visceral, emotionally charged and startlingly honest
document of her experience as a woman living through everyday
change.
--Celia Graham-Dixon, LensCulture The idea that women will become
invisible when they reach middle age isn't so much a universal
truth but a veiled threat--a kind of campfire story, as the writer
Kristen Roupenian puts it in the foreword of Midlife, a new
book by Elinor Carucci, who took the discomfiting photo that
accompanied Roupenian's viral short story Cat Person. But
there is truth, she continues, to the fact "signs of aging in women
are treated as though they ought to be invisible." Suffice to say,
in Midlife, that isn't the case: Carucci captures the
inevitable unapologetically--and so effectively that one wonders
why she ever would apologize in the first place.
--Stephanie Eckardt, W Magazine Photography no longer comforted
[Carucci]; it confronted her with her own mortality. But she didn't
avoid it, as some women begin to do, deftly stepping out of the
shots at family gatherings. Instead, she fit her camera with a
macro lens and turned on powerful strobe lights to illuminate aging
skin, facial hair, and even blood. The images pair the precision of
a scientist with all the drama of Caravaggio, an artist who
embraced what his own era deemed vulgar and profane, insisting art
be made and painted from life.
--Laura Mallonee, WIRED
Carucci expertly weaves photographs of her family, photographs of
herself, close-ups of objects like pills or a dead baby bird, and
what we later find out to be paintings made with the artist's own
blood. . . . The element of drama Carucci invites into photos like
Kiss Trace, 2015 and You Know More of the Parenting Falls To Me,
2017 aestheticizes familiar familial tropes to tell a story of the
triumphs and challenges of life and love. I could relate and also
not relate just enough so that the artist showed us something
recognizable but at the same time, entirely her own. To me, the
photos monumentalize something that, if we're lucky enough to have,
we usually take for granted. That is, family, intimacy, the process
of aging, even those seemingly mundane routines like putting away
the groceries which Carucci manages to make tender and
beautiful.
--Isabella Kazanecki, Musee Magazine
Now [Carucci] has released a continuation of her
self-portrait in the form of a new photo book, Midlife, which is a
document of life in her forties. Here, she once again turns the
gaze that she used in the previous decade--harsh and forgiving at
the same time--onto herself. the lighting she chooses doesn't
flatter flaws, and gives her images an almost theatrical look, a
chiaroscuro effect, throwing into stark relief the parts we might
usually try to tone down or avoid looking at for too long or too
close.
--Charlotte Jansen, Elephant Magazine
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