This article presents what is likely the final extended interview with the photographer Joe Deal, conducted shortly before his death. Through a series of candid, reflective exchanges, Deal discusses his formative influences—from Fluxus and Minimalism to the conceptual strategies of the late 1960s and early 1970s—and the evolving ideas that shaped his contribution to the landmark 1975 exhibition 'New Topographics: Photographs of a Man-Altered Landscape.' Revisiting early experiences at St. Cloud State, the Kansas City Art Institute, and George Eastman House, the conversation traces Deal’s engagement with issues of scale, detachment, and photographic neutrality, offering unique insight into the development of his aesthetic and ethical approach to landscape photography. The article is framed by commentary on critical reception (including responses recorded in Light Gallery guest books) and contextualises Deal’s work within wider institutional histories and conceptual trajectories. More than a historical document, this exchange offers a powerful model for how photography might still engage with form, politics, and ambiguity.
Mark Rawlinson (Mon,) studied this question.