- Gregory Crewdson's Photography Capturing a Movie Frame | Art in Progress
- Juxtapoz Magazine - The Imagined Worlds of Gregory Crewdson
- Gregory Crewdson at White Cube, frieze.com
- White Cube Gallery: Gregory Crewdson's London Representative
- Luhring Augustine Gallery: Gregory Crewdson's U.S. Representative
- Five In Focus: Gregory Crewdson - Crewdson picks five movies that have influenced his photographic style: Vertigo, Night of the Hunter, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Blue Velvet, Safe
- "Photographs from Twilight exhibition". Photography. Victoria and Albert Museum. http://www.vam.ac.uk/collections/photography/past_exhns/twilight/crewdson/index.html.
- Works by Gregory Crewdson in Cal Cego. Contemporary Art Collection
- Google Images
- “Aesthetics of Alienation,” Tate Etc., Issue 1, Volume 1, Summer 2004, pp. 42–47 Full text online
- Aperture magazine profile - includes interview about preproduction, production, and postproduction of images
- Guardian Article 10.4.06
- The Speedies feat Gregory Crewdson, 1979
- Bomb magazine interview 1997
- Gregory Crewdson's $1 Million Photo Shoot by Christopher Peterson
- Behind the Scenes: Caught Looking Michele McDonald, Boston Globe
- Interviews, Production Stills, and Images published by Aperture (04/2008)
- Afrtinfo interview (03/2006)
- NPR interview (01/2006)
- Gregory Crewdson's Epic Effects By Kenneth R. Fletcher, Smithsonian Magazine, June 2008
- Gregory Crewdson catalogue in artnet's Artist Works Catalogues
- Art Info - How Gregory Crewdson Found a New Path in the Haunted Backlots of Rome, Sept. 2010
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Gregory Crewdson - Photography
"Best known for his elaborately choreographed, large-scale photographs . . . the images that comprise Crewdson's . . . series take place in the homes, streets, and forests of unnamed small towns. The photographs portray emotionally charged moments of seemingly ordinary individuals caught in ambiguous and often disquieting circumstances. Both epic in scale and intimate in scope, these visually breathtaking photographs blur the distinctions between cinema and photography, reality and fantasy, what has happened and what is to come."
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