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    Home»Artist»Pasquale Cuomo: A Photographer Rooted in Time and Steel
    Artist

    Pasquale Cuomo: A Photographer Rooted in Time and Steel

    ArtWireBy ArtWireApril 13, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Pasquale J. Cuomo has been behind the lens for more than fifty years. That kind of stretch isn’t just a measure of time—it’s a front-row seat to the transformation of photography itself. Born and raised in the U.S., Cuomo’s artistic path has carried him from the darkroom days of film to the precision of digital photography, and in some ways, back again. His work reflects a steady, clear-eyed appreciation for craft—never chasing trends, always anchored in substance.

    Cuomo doesn’t need gimmicks. He leans on patience, curiosity, and a deep respect for the subjects he photographs. Whether he’s capturing the worn face of an old building or the sweeping arc of an industrial structure, there’s a quiet dignity in his images. They speak to time—not just the moment they were taken, but all the moments that led up to them. That sensibility runs through all his work, especially his recent project at Bethlehem Steel.


    Bethlehem Steel: Echoes of Industry

    One of Cuomo’s recent series focuses on the now-abandoned Bethlehem Steel Works in Pennsylvania. Once a titan of American industry, the site is now quiet, its machinery still, its buildings hollowed out by time. But Cuomo doesn’t see decay. He sees stories. He sees structure.

    “This is one of a series of 20 taken at the Bethlehem Steel Works in Pennsylvania last summer,” he says. “Of course, the massive facility is closed and abandoned.” But that’s exactly what draws him in. The bones of the place still hold weight. The steel still stands. The lines and angles still demand attention.

    There’s a kind of reverence in how Cuomo frames these scenes. He doesn’t just snap a shot of a rusted beam or a crumbling smokestack. He considers the scale, the shadow, the shape. He sees what it took to make a place like this—and what it takes to maintain its memory.


    A Photographer Drawn to Shape and Skill

    Cuomo isn’t just interested in ruins. He’s fascinated by what they represent. “I am fascinated by the incredible complexity and the skills to not only to produce steel but to build and maintain this once-mighty industrial giant,” he explains. It’s the effort, the ingenuity, the coordination of thousands of hands and minds that made Bethlehem Steel what it was. His camera doesn’t just record what’s left—it honors what came before.

    That’s a recurring theme in Cuomo’s work. He has a way of pulling stories out of structures. His images aren’t loud, but they’re sturdy. They stand like monuments—reminders of how much humans can build, and how quickly those creations can become forgotten.


    Seeing the Shape of Stillness

    What makes Cuomo’s photographs from Bethlehem Steel stand out isn’t just their subject—it’s their tone. There’s a quietness to them, a stillness that’s almost eerie. But it’s not empty. The silence in his images feels full. It holds weight.

    He doesn’t manipulate or dramatize. He doesn’t chase the perfect light or artificially boost contrast. He lets the architecture speak. The scale of the buildings, the intersecting lines of pipes and beams, the textures of rust and concrete—all of it is allowed to just be. The viewer is invited to slow down and look.

    In a world where so much photography is fast and filtered, Cuomo’s work moves in the opposite direction. It respects slowness. It respects the frame.


    A Lifelong Conversation with Photography

    Pasquale Cuomo’s journey through photography has spanned more than just eras. It’s spanned ideas—about permanence, about industry, about memory. He’s photographed many things over the years, but one constant is his focus on craft. His work doesn’t chase beauty. It finds it—in the rust, in the shadow, in the forgotten.

    His Bethlehem Steel series isn’t nostalgic. It doesn’t romanticize the past. Instead, it captures what’s still here. The steel. The form. The echo. Cuomo reminds us that even in decline, these structures matter. They’re not just leftovers from a different time—they’re evidence of effort, skill, and labor.

    That’s what makes his photography feel solid. It’s built to last. Like the steel he photographs, Cuomo’s work is a product of care and strength.

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