Tag: Norling

  • A Writer, a Photographer, a Life, a Town, a World

    "Where is Brad Zellar?" you might ask, as his hiatus from The Rake has created quite a void. Happily, he’s been busy promoting his new book, Suburban World: The Norling Photos, from Borealis Books.

    Zellar discovered Irwin Norling
    in 2002, when he unearthed Norling’s neglected negatives from the
    Bloomington Historical Society archives. Struck by the breadth and
    depth of the subject matter — everything from family portraits,
    Shriners, and donkey baseball games, to car crashes, drug busts, and
    murder scenes — and by the "astonishing and remarkably comprehensive
    record of life in one American community," Zellar unknowingly began his
    quest to compile his first book. The result is an extraordinary photo
    essay book featuring Bloomington, MN, from the late 1940s through the ’70s — and the beautiful irony of a veteran journalist exposing an amateur photographer who expertly documented an era.

    Brad
    Zellar is an accomplished journalist, a brilliant writer, and an
    incredible human being. Some might call him a "character" even. And
    they wouldn’t be wrong. So, here we have a great character, and a great storyteller, who happens to run into
    another character — or at least his work — and gets blown away by it.
    Why? Probably because he’s just as much a character, because he’s just
    a good a storyteller, and because he has a similarly bleak underbelly.
    If you’ve been following Zellar’s Yo, Ivanhoe! blog, you should know that underbelly quite well by now.

    Norling
    wasn’t your typical photographer. He was just a guy — a guy who took
    photos, a guy who was clearly obsessed with documenting life in some
    form, and a guy who sat for hours at his police radio waiting for calls
    to come in so he could run out and photograph the latest accident, the
    latest murder scene, or any other major event, no matter how bleak.

    Seems to me he and Zellar would have made a mighty pair.

    That
    said, the book itself is quite an accomplishment. While it looks like
    your typical coffee table book at first glance — something you can
    impress your guests with perhaps, but that might serve no purpose
    beyond that — this is certainly not the case. Suburban World: The Norling Photos will keep you enthralled from start to finish.

    The forward, written by professional photographer Alec Soth,
    presents a most honest and provocative perspective on the art of
    photography. "Most great pictures aren’t about artistry," writes Soth,
    as he goes on to explain how professional photographers have to get over themselves
    and avoid pretense in order to take good photos. In the end, his
    argument extols the virtues of amateur photography — a most
    controversial idea coming from a professional photographer.

    Following
    Soth’s forward, Zellar steps in with his master story-telling skills.
    But what story is he telling? Norling’s? His own? Bloomington’s? All of
    the above. Zellar weaves together a story that takes us across
    generations and paints a picture of the picture of the picture, and
    more. And, frankly, it’s engaging at every level. Framed in his own
    story of discovery, Zellar tells us Norling’s story, and shares with us
    a fuller picture of Bloomington than Norling’s photos alone could ever
    tell.

    And then come the photos. Beginning with his first
    accident photo in 1941 and ending with the opening of the Interstate
    Highway 35W (which is actually one of very few photos placed out of
    chronological sequence), the photos document the development of a city
    and its people over a twenty year span. The beauty, however, is in the
    juxtaposition of sweet everyday images and grotesque realities — the
    local hardware store followed by an autopsy photo, a tea-pouring
    housewife followed by a fatal accident, a wedding followed by a BPO
    training and an electrocution. While it may seem an odd mix of photos,
    the collection offers an unusually panoptic glimpse at the past. And
    the photos of accidents and violence lend a telling air of disrupted
    placidity — the clash of old and new, the perils of change, and the
    backlash of progress.

    You don’t need to be Bloomington obsessed —
    or Zellar obsessed, for that matter — to enjoy this one. And to top it
    off, the Minnesota Historical Society is kicking off the book release
    with an exhibit featuring Norling’s photos and a recreation of his
    darkroom. Don’t miss out.

    Reception and book signing on April 1, from 5 to 8 p.m.; author presentation on April 8th at 7 p.m.; Minnesota History Center.

    April 9, at 7:30 p.m., Richfield Borders Books and Music.

    April 16th at 7:30 p.m., Magers & Quinn Booksellers.