Aperture presents “Cargo”, Richard Misrach’s striking meditation on the global shipping industry.
A master of contemporary landscape photography, Richard Misrach was a seminal figure in the 1970s color movement, long celebrated for his ability to combine beauty with subtle social critique.
Across five decades, he has crafted an oeuvre that pushes the photographic image into the realms of both fine art and cultural record, from his haunting Desert Cantos series to the iconic Golden Gate, a 13-year project that documented San Francisco’s most famous landmark through changing light and weather. With Cargo, his latest monograph, Misrach returns to the Bay Area, once again setting his gaze on the confluence of nature, industry, and history.
The book comprises photographs of cargo ships in the San Francisco Bay, beginning in 2021, at a moment when the global shipping industry was reeling from the fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic. With supply chains paralyzed and ports clogged, these vessels became powerful symbols of both global interdependence and fragility. Yet Misrach approaches them not as blunt metaphors but as subjects in a vast maritime theatre, diminutive yet stubborn presences adrift in atmospheres of sea, sky, and shifting light.
The images oscillate between the documentary and the meditative. At times, ships appear as stark silhouettes, their dark, angular forms set against glowing dawns or shrouded in the soft veil of mist. In one striking triptych that forms the book’s centerpiece, a massive container vessel—flanked by two smaller companions—slowly recedes into obscurity: from solid form in the first frame to a faint ghost by the third, nearly swallowed by the cloudy, grey winter morning. Elsewhere, ships gleam more vividly, their lights flickering like neon constellations across dark waters.
Always, Misrach’s mastery of color and atmosphere renders not just what is seen, but what is felt: the chill of predawn air, the damp weight of fog, the quiet immensity of the Bay.
The work resonates with multiple histories. There is the immediate story of economic collapse and fragile recovery, etched into the silhouettes of these seaborne leviathans. There is a confrontation between human industry and natural environment, a theme increasingly fraught in an era of climate crisis. And there is the deeper lineage of maritime art: from J.M.W. Turner’s tempestuous seascapes to Caspar David Friedrich’s meditations on solitude and vastness. Misrach, too, channels this tradition, yet his vessels are not heroic ships of empire or exploration; they are stubborn workhorses of global trade, monolithic, monumental yet oddly vulnerable.
In this sense, Cargo feels both a continuation and a return. Like Golden Gate, it is rooted in place, in the mutable theatre of the Bay’s weather and light. Yet where the earlier series captured a fixed monument transformed by atmosphere, here Misrach’s subjects are transitory. industrial giants passing through, briefly monumental before fading into the vastness of the open ocean.
The result is a work that is at once elegiac and urgent, a testament to photography’s power to transform the everyday into the sublime, while also holding a mirror to our historical moment. It is a testament to Misrach’s ability to continue producing work of striking resonance and significance, even after a career spanning more than fifty years, and perfectly embodies his conviction: “beauty is an effective strategy to get someone’s attention”.
All images © Richard Misrach
Cargo is published by Aperture and is available here.