Amos Badertscher passed away in 2023, shortly before his first hometown retrospective opened at UMBC’s Albin O. Kuhn Library Gallery. It was sad timing, but fitting for a photographer whose work and writing anticipated earthly rewards and documented tragedies with the same unblinking lust.
Badertscher also deliberately spent most of his decades-spanning career as one of Baltimore’s greatest under-known artists—eschewing the spotlights of galleries on his way back and forth from back alleys to his home darkroom. To this day, you are more likely to hear his name muttered in the context of gossip amongst a dive bar’s elder happy-hour crowd than discussed in an art institutional context.
That’s about to change. This month, the esteemed international art publisher Phaidon ships Amos Badertscher: Images and Stories, a long-overdue 334 page monograph containing a treasure trove of Badertscher’s intimate photos and recollections from the late 1950s through early 2000s. Many of those are scans of images Badertscher revisited and reprinted decades after originally shooting them—marking them up with his confessional annotations in the margins—relating years of sexual desires, transactional relationships, and matter-of-fact documentation of the seedy underbelly of a Baltimore that’s been long-ago waxed smooth.