Richard Renaldi (born 1968) is an American
portrait photographer.[1] His four main books each contain portraits of people Renaldi met in public, and some landscapes, made over numerous years with an 8×10
large formatview camera. Those books are: Figure and Ground (2006)—various people throughout the USA;[2]Fall River Boys (2009)—young men (and some women) growing up in the post-industrial city of
Fall River, Massachusetts; Touching Strangers (2014)—strangers posed by Renaldi physically touching in some way, made all over the USA;[3][4][5][6][7] and Manhattan Sunday (2016)—
LGBT people photographed between midnight and 10 am on Sundays[1] mainly on the streets of
Manhattan having left nightclubs.[8][9][10]
Renaldi was born in Chicago, Illinois, in 1968 and grew up there.[10] He moved to New York City in 1986.[3] He lived in Los Angeles for two years, starting in 2003.[2] He received a
BFA in photography from
New York University[10] in 1990.
Figure and Ground was made over seven years. Fall River Boys was made over nine years, beginning in 2000. Touching Strangers was made over seven years, beginning in 2007, and inspired by an earlier series of Renaldi's, Bus Travelers, "that looked at the intimate spaces strangers often share."[6][13]Manhattan Sunday was made between 2010 and 2016.
Renaldi established Charles Lane Press in 2008 to publish new projects by contemporary photographers.[14]
Publications
Publications by Renaldi
Figure and Ground. New York City:
Aperture, 2006.
ISBN978-1597110297. With an essay by Roger Hargreaves.
Fall River Boys. New York City: Charles Lane Press, 2009. With an introductory essay by
Michael Cunningham. Edition of 1200 copies.