A brief trip to Los Angeles for meetings at The Getty, LACMA, and to discuss the Diana Vreeland film project. My visit also coincided with Photo LA now in it's 17th year.
First stop was the Getty where they currently have three photography shows up - Graziela Iturbide, Andre Kertesz, and The Nude. I'm afraid I found the Iturbide a
bit of a snooze, and the Kertesz same old, but the nudes were lively and there was one terrific Manuel Alvarez Bravo picture from 1938 with an interesting caption about how Bravo had hired one model to pose for him for an entire year. Talk about a year in pictures! I will try to get a j-peg from the Getty, but as I was stopped from taking pictures by a vigilant guard, the picture below is the best I could do.
At The Getty I ran into none other than Sally Mann, who had just opened a show of her extreme close-up portraits of her children at Gagosian in Beverly Hills. It might not be the best space to show work, but the pictures have lost none of their power since they were first shown in New York a year ago. (Surprisingly, for anything Gagosian, the gallery assistant behind the front desk was exceptionally friendly in a most un-New York way.)
That floor must go!
I particularly liked this picture of Virginia, who we don't see much of these days.
Then it was on to Photo LA from which I've included just a few highlights. While these look like imitation Adam Fuss photograms, they were actually quite beautiful photographs of colored water by the Vietnamese photographer Han Nguyen.
Julius Schulman's architectural pictures of Los Angeles were much in evidence.
With Richard Prince ascendant, several dealers had rare Richard Prince books and portfolios. The conceptual gag here is that Prince signs all the photos to himself and then re-photographs the "finished" work.
A striking new Scott Peterman taken in Cairo.
A Gary Winogrand taken at the Beverly Hilton in 1964.
Ed Ruscha in 1970 by Jerry McMillan
And finally, from the Magnum booth, an unusual Alec Soth featuring Brigitte Bardot taken in Paris last year.
Friday, January 11, 2008
Letter from L.A.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment