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Gary Saretzky Photo Books

Traub, Charles. Beach by Charles Traub. Signed by Charles Traub.

Traub, Charles. Beach by Charles Traub. Signed by Charles Traub.

通常価格 $50.00 USD
通常価格 セール価格 $50.00 USD
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Condition

Horizon Press, 1978. 1st edition of 2,500 copies. 60 pages. Stiff illustrated wraps. [Traub was Director of prestigious Light Gallery in New York at the time this book was issued.] Summary:

Beach (published in 1978 by Horizon Press) is the highly acclaimed first monograph by American photographer and educator Charles H. Traub. Comprising 60 pages of black-and-white photographs, the book features an introductory interview of Traub conducted by Chicago artist and critic Harry Bouras.

The volume captures candid, unposed moments of diverse beachgoers relaxing along Chicago’s Lake Michigan waterfront during the early-to-mid 1970s.


Key Style and Themes

  • The Inherent Democracy of the Beach: Traub treats the public beach as an equalizer. Stripped of their everyday clothing, uniforms, and social masks, people from all walks of life, body types, and ages coexist. In this shared space, their inhibitions wane, revealing a raw, vulnerable, and playful humanness.

  • The Innovative Vignette: Visually, the defining characteristic of the book is Traub's use of a unique, custom-made vignette framing technique on his Rolleiflex SL66 camera. By darkening or softening the edges of the square frame, Traub isolates his subjects from the chaotic background of the public shore, transforming casual snapshots into intimate, formal portraits.

  • "Genial Acceptance and Critical Caricature": Praised by Traub's mentor, legendary photographer Aaron Siskind, the book strikes a delicate balance. It observes the eccentricities, sun-baked wrinkles, and awkward postures of urban beach culture with a sharp, sometimes humorous edge, yet maintains a warm sense of empathy and acceptance toward its subjects.

  • The Open Witness: Moving openly among the crowds rather than sneaking candid shots from afar, Traub’s presence is often subtly acknowledged by the beachgoers. This creates a unique dynamic of mutual recognition, capturing moments of unguarded sensuality, pride, and comedic exhibitionism.


Significance

Beach established Charles H. Traub as a significant voice in late-20th-century street and documentary photography. It serves as an essential time capsule of 1970s leisure culture, bridging the rigorous, formalist training of Chicago’s Institute of Design with a deeply humanistic, observational eye. The series laid the thematic groundwork for his lifelong fascination with human nature in the sun—a subject he would return to for decades.

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