These works show the range of Shore’s accomplishments, from early conceptual experiments in black and white in the late 1960s, to his pioneering color work of the 1970s, to a current project in Ukraine about Holocaust survivors. In the early 1970s Shore embarked on a series of road trips across the United States. He made color photographs along the way, shooting ordinary American scenes, such as disheveled motel bedrooms, roadside billboards, and gas stations. The result was two significant bodies of work: American Surfaces, shot using a Rollei 35mm camera (a precursor to the point-and-shoot camera), and Uncommon Places, shot with an eight-by-ten inch view camera; selections from both series are on view here. In his work Shore uses color to record the range and intensity of hues seen in life, making photographs that celebrate the poetry found in the banal.