Saturday, December 12, 2009

Nothing New: Amir Zaki Selects Vintage Photographs of Southern California, 1870-1950 (11/21-12/19)





Steve Turner Contemporary presents Nothing New: Amir Zaki Selects Vintage Photographs of Southern California, 1870-1950. This marks the first exhibition in the gallery's new program, Artists Select, in which contemporary artists curate exhibitions by selecting works from local private collections.

Nothing New features more than one hundred photographs that Zaki selected from a large private collection of vintage photographs documenting the growth of Southern California. In a nod to New Topographics: Photographs of a Man-Altered Landscape, the seminal 1975 exhibition mounted by Eastman House, (a reinterpretation of which is currently on view at LACMA), Zaki has selected images depicting the Southern California landscape as changed by man, images that were created decades before >New Topographics. These photographs depict such buildings as banks, schools, churches and storefronts. They are presented in stylistic and topical groupings and make the case that the New Topographics photographers drew upon a rich history. While Walker Evans is often cited as a source of inspiration, it is photos such as these-many by anonymous photographers-that inspired Evans. Such works, often in the format of the photo postcard, were hugely influential and were the basis for much later work. In addition to the photographs on display, there will be a computer terminal set up so that visitors can view the database of over 3000 images that Zaki saw when he made his selections.



Currently until Dec 19, 2009

Steve Turner Contemporary
6026 Wilshire Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90036 (across from BCAM at LACMA)

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