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Nathaniel Goldberg

Nathaniel Goldberg was born in France to a French Father and an American Mother. At the age of 15, he discovered a passion for photography that would later push him to leave his native Paris for New York City to pursue a career in photography. In the mid- 90’s his talent for image making was noticed by many prestigious brands & magazines.​ ​​He now resides in Paris and continues to collaborate with magazines and brands such as Vogue Italia, Vogue Paris, V Magazine, Harper’s Bazaar, Armani, Hermès, Gucci and Christian Dior. Nathaniel is currently working on personal projects which take him to Bangkok, India, ​and ​Spain​ ​among others.
 
 

Délicatesse in photography
by Jérôme Neutres

Book published by Damiani Editore
 
If you ask me to sum up in one word my feelings about Nathaniel Goldberg’s photography, the word “délicatesse” comes first. Subtle, radiant, peaceful: the images created by Goldberg through twenty-five years of a rich and productive career allow us to see a world in which the attention to the beauty of things goes with a sensitive respect for it. Nathaniel Goldberg is a man one could call a “great soul”. Logically, his work testifies to a true humanism, particularly rare and precious in an art world often marked by the egocentrism of many artists. Goldberg knows how to watch, and through his photographs, we as viewers, also learn how to watch and indeed how to see – surely the highest achievement of a visual art. In those images, the photographer isn’t controlling his models but dialoguing with them; he never aims to capture a subject or a personality directly, but lightly approaches the spirit of the things his eye observes. Portrait, fashion, landscape, documentary: composed with images selected and edited by the photographer himself, this book is definitely what we call an “artist book”. Displaying various themes and heterogeneous subjects like waves of memories, this panoramic summary of Goldberg’s photographic work looks in a sense like a self-portrait. In these portraits, Stella Tennant appears perhaps as the heart of the photographer’s work. Aristocratic and punk, feminine and masculine, Stella embodies the delicate balance of the contraries the art of Goldberg searches out. Both fascinating and disturbing, India is naturally a land of paradoxes Nathaniel Goldberg explores: “One needs three lives to know India”, a proverb says. The photographer knows it, and explores the magical subcontinent with the necessary humility, regarding it as a land of opportunities and confusions. What else better than the daily life of Aghori Guru to depict the deep philosophy of an Indian vision of life?
 
As a true artist, Goldberg comes before and after other artists, engraving his work within his own history of photography and the visual arts. Looking at some images, a careful eye will think of some conscious or unconscious references Goldberg likes to quote in a corner of his photographs. Here Newton, in an image of a glamorous lady lying erotically on her long armchair; here Hopper, in the space-time of a gas station lit in the night; here Cartier-Bresson, focusing on the matching of three pairs of legs under a coffee table; here Penn, composing a graphic geometric visual after a fashion commission. This book, as the life of an artist has to be, is also a collection of exchanges with the masters of Goldberg. As brilliant with studio photography as in his documentary work, magazine commissions or personal explorations, Nathaniel Goldberg handles all techniques and styles perfectly. Add a rare delicate eye to this most professional touch, and there you find the artist in the photographer.