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William Karl Valentine

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Owl in my Star Pine - Newport Beach, California (NB DSC 5929 11-6-22)

Small Works Exhibition - South x Southeast Gallery - August 2023

July 13, 2023

I am pleased to announce that curator Donna Garcia selected the above photograph, “Owl in my Star Pine” for inclusion in the South x Southeast Gallery’s upcoming “Small Works” Exhibition.  The work will be displayed online and in the South x Southeast’ gallery space in Molena, Georgia this August through September.   I am also excited that exhibition will hang during “Slow Exposures” Photography Festival: Celebrating Photography in the Rural South, in neighboring Concord, Georgia.

This exhibition call was a chance for me to showcase one of my lesser-known images, in this case a photograph I have never exhibited before.  I really like this photograph, but I knew when I made the exposure that the image would not fit in to any of my primary portfolios.  Didn’t matter, this is an example why you should make the exposure when you see an image that interests you even if you don’t know how you would ever use it.  Like that old paraphrased Winogrand quote says: “You photograph something to see what it looks like photographed”. I also liked the technical challenge of photographing an owl at night that far away.

Background about this Image.  If you are familiar with Newport Beach you might not expect to find a home here with two pine trees and a 100’ tall Star Pine on the property, but my house does.  I have lived here for 29 years and a couple of years ago I started hearing owls in the neighborhood, eventually they started sitting on the top of my Star Pine.  The owls come and go, sometimes I hear them every night for two or three months straight and then they will be gone for several months.  I have heard them on a couple times in the last week and not in my tree. I have used a 400mm lens with a flash on my D850 to photograph the owl before and was lucky to have been able to photograph two owls in the tree at the same time.  With most of my owl photographs I am standing within 6 feet of my front door.  For this submitted image I used my D500 with a 300mm zoom lens because I was in a hurry to get the image of the owl with the alignment of the rising moon.  This image lent itself to be cropped square so for this exhibition I had it printed and framed so it was 12” x 12” with no matting (Price $375, no edition set but limited up to 27).

More photographs of the Owls

Owl in the Rain - NB DSC 1053 12-30-22

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And a few photographs from last September when the crows were going after a Cooper’s Hawk in the pine tree 20’ away from my Star Pine. I didn’t see the owl at first, he looked like he was just hanging out, but I assume that he and the hawk were both going after the young in a nearby crow’s nest.

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I am not a nature photographer, but I appreciate God’s creations and find all the birds in my yard interesting (although I hate the crows, they are annoying), so as a photographer, I photograph them, it is just a compulsion I guess at this point.

In Galleries, Photographer, Photography, Photography Exhibitions Tags William Karl Valentine, Newport Beach, Owl, Star Pine, Documentary Photography, Night Photography, Nikon D500, Donna Garcia, South x Southeast Gallery, Small Prints, Exhibition
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Atlanta Photography Group - Portfolio 2023 Exhibition - Now Open

May 18, 2023

I am proud to announce that six of my photographs have been selected for the Atlanta Photography Group’s “Portfolio 2023” exhibition, which opened Tuesday. I am especially honored that Shana Lopes, who is the Assistant Curator of Photography at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art was the juror for this exhibition. Only eight photographers were selected, and one of us will have their photographs placed into the permanent collection of the prestigious High Museum in Atlanta from the purchase award associated with the exhibition.

This is my sixth Atlanta Photography Group exhibition, and this is the first time I have had my work selected for their portfolio exhibition. This is a significant career moment for me because the APG Portfolio exhibition is so competitive and always judged by a renowned curator. I am once again thankful for Donna Garcia and the staff at APG for all their work organizing this exhibition and securing Shana to make the selections. I am also thankful for the APG board, staff (Nicole LeCorgne), and community for building the best photography organization of this kind in the country. I am also excited about APG’s future with the addition of David Clifton-Strawn as APG’s new Executive Director.

Photographs in the exhibition

View fullsize "Welcome to Hell" Officer Bill Walton (PPD - 026 #17 6/27/85)
"Welcome to Hell" Officer Bill Walton (PPD - 026 #17 6/27/85)
View fullsize Bus ride to the Rose Parade briefing (PPD-146 #23 12/31/86)
Bus ride to the Rose Parade briefing (PPD-146 #23 12/31/86)
View fullsize Officers Gales and Rangel in the report writing room. (PPD-053 #19A 10/4/85)
Officers Gales and Rangel in the report writing room. (PPD-053 #19A 10/4/85)
View fullsize Agent Pratt dusting a recovered stolen vehicle (PPD-128 #18A 7/9/86)
Agent Pratt dusting a recovered stolen vehicle (PPD-128 #18A 7/9/86)
View fullsize Officer Aguilar filling out gang card - Chino PD (PD-048 #20 March 1995)
Officer Aguilar filling out gang card - Chino PD (PD-048 #20 March 1995)
View fullsize Domestic Violence suspect - Chino (CPD DSC_1618_ 11/17/22)
Domestic Violence suspect - Chino (CPD DSC_1618_ 11/17/22)

Background Information about the images in the exhibition:

“Welcome to Hell” (1985) – Bill Walton was an outstanding street cop.  Where all the young officers wanted to work in the action-packed area with the gangsters and rock cocaine sales, Walton was happy working in the slower East side of the Pasadena.  He wasn’t lazy in fact he had to work harder to get his arrests than officers in the busy areas.  I remember how Walton would hunt vehicle burglars hitting the cars in the restaurant and theatre parking lots of his area.  He had a number of hidden lookout spots where he could sit with his binoculars scanning the lots for thieves.  He made lots of self-initiated arrests because he cared about protecting his beat. His clipboard has his unit call sign (“3L41” - signifying Swing shift, solo officer car, Beat 4, and the first unit in that beat, usually he was the only officer on that end of the city) and “E.S.P.” (Copying the East Side Pasadena gang graffiti), as well as the bumper sticker.

“Bus Ride” (1986) - Every New Years Eve, officers would get dressed at the old police station then get bused the half mile over to the convention center for the large briefing of all personnel working security along the route of The Rose Parade.  Over a million people come to watch the parade each year, many of which camp out overnight and like to celebrate New Years Eve.  Some areas of the route are calm and other areas were known to be rowdy every year.  The buses used for these trips were Los Angeles County Sheriff inmate transportation buses.  I always thought the contrast between the gang graffiti etched on the roof of the bus and the police officers added a lot to this image.  I also love how this image captured the comradery of the officers and diversity.

“Report Writing” (1985) - Documents the unglamourous part of law enforcement you never see in the movies or TV shows, having to write reports.  Back then everything was handwritten or typed by the officers.  Lots of white out and erasers.  I chose a different angle to showcase how much paperwork actually have to deal with.  The images also lets the viewer see how unglamourous the report writing area was.

“Dusting for prints” (1986) – I learned so much about the profession while photographing at Pasadena PD that I would later use in my own career as a Police Officer and Detective at Chino PD.  As I was photographing Calvin Pratt, he taught me to always dust the center review mirror on recovered stolen vehicles because everyone always adjusts the mirrors the first time. He said most car thieves would wipe down the stolen cars when abandoning them but often would forget to wipe down the center mirror.  Auto theft investigation would later become one of my areas of expertise’s at Chino PD.

“Gang Card” (1995) – Foremost this image documents the era when law enforcement was encouraged to do more gang enforcement to combat rising crime in Southern California.  There are a few layers in this image, the gang tattoo, which was hidden at first, the subject looking away avoiding eye contact and the posture between the officer and the subject. 

“Domestic Violence Suspect” – (2022) Last year the Chief of Police at Chino PD asked me if I would be willing to come back and photograph officers out on patrol again and I immediately told him I would.  A couple years ago I had decided it would be good to photograph this current era of Law Enforcement so I could document the changes within the profession in my time. With the pandemic I had not found the right opportunity yet. This image documents something that unfortunately never seems to change, domestic violence.  The man in the back seat of the unit is a domestic violence suspect who allegedly got drunk and slugged his wife in the face during an argument.  When the first officers arrived, he resisted arrest and a crowd formed in the apartment complex prompting officers to have to call for a “code three back” for more assistance.  After being handcuffed the man refused to walk to the police car and had to be carried to it by officers.  The man’s brother, whom he had been drinking with, said the man resisted arrest because was afraid the arrest would hurt his ability to lawfully immigrate to this country.  If I correctly remember the man and his family came to the United States from Nicaragua, crossed the border illegally, and were placed in this apartment complex while waiting for their immigration hearing about their asylum request.

Information about images in Previous APG Exhibitions (see below):

“Kevin Hall at the Do Dah Parade” (1985) – The Do Dah Parade is an annual event where people hold a spoof parade making fun of the Rose Parade.  I think it still exists, but its popularity has waned, it was at its peak in the 80’s and 90’s.  This image is a great document of the parade, but I also love the symbolism in it.  Kevin was a big good-looking cop, who wore the uniform well.  Here he is looking cool, calm, and collected in amongst a world of pandemonium. The image symbolizes what society expects from all officers but has little concept of how hard that is to achieve, especially in today’s world.

“Young Guns” (1986) – Pasadena PD Officers Hal Edwards, Matt Harrell, Mark Rangel, and Don Osterholt.   These are Graveyard shift officers lined up in the hallway at the station waiting to check out their unit keys, shotguns, and portable radios.  Law Enforcement Graveyard shifts inherently have many young officers because they have the least amount of seniority and can’t get a better shift yet.  Younger officers often bring more energy, make more mistakes, and have lots of bravado.  When I made the exposure I felt the image captured the invincible, fraternal, mindset many young Graveyard officers have.  I also liked the fact this image documented the diversity which Pasadena PD had in the 1980’s.  I gave this image the title “Young Guns” sometime later, with the inspiration being the 1988 Western movie with that title.

Related photographs which have recently shown at APG but are not in this current exhibition.

View fullsize Officer Kevin Hall - The Do Dah Parade (PPD-057#14 - 12/1/85)
Officer Kevin Hall - The Do Dah Parade (PPD-057#14 - 12/1/85)
View fullsize "Young Guns" (PPD-071 #01A - 1/03/86)
"Young Guns" (PPD-071 #01A - 1/03/86)

Artist Statement for this submission:

My father was a Reserve Police Officer with the Pasadena Police Department for over 30 years.  I would go with him when he went to the station to drop off paperwork and he often stopped by our house nights he was on patrol.  Because of this I saw my first dead body when I was about six years old, 1969.  A hippie had overdosed, and his friends brought him to the emergency clinic next to the station, but he was already dead.  MY dad took me over to his body in the VW bus and told me my first lesson about drug use.  I remember the scene vividly to this day.

I started attending Arizona State University in the fall of 1984 as a Photography major.  For a class assignment, I needed a documentary project to photograph during spring break.  I came up with the idea of photographing the Pasadena Police Department and my dad made the arrangements so I could go on a series of ride-alongs to photograph.  The first night I rode with a Sergeant who was a good family friend.  He took me all over, introduced me to the younger officers, and he got me on scene of a suicide, a woman named Tina Hart who shot herself in the middle of the street.  I immediately liked being in a police car   and knew the access I had could lead to a powerful body of work. Northwest Pasadena in the mid 1980’s was crazy, lots of rock cocaine and gangs; the Bloods and Crips in Southern California were very active.  When I got back to school the work was well received. 

I continued the Pasadena PD series during the following summer.  I quickly earned the trust of more officers and ended up becoming a technical reserve working in the photo lab during the day while still photographing on the street at night.  Between 1985 and 1987 I spent over 1,000 hours on the street photographing officers with unlimited access. 

When I graduated I did not want to become a press photographer, so I decided to become a police officer.  I attended the Rio Hondo Police Academy and then became our class photographer which gave me more unique access.  I was then hired by the Chino Police Department in 1987.  I spent most of my career working Patrol with years in the Detective Bureau.  I was medically retired in 2008 because of injuries.  Working patrol photographed when I could but I obviously had to perform my duties first.  Last year the Chief at Chino PD asked me to return and start photographing the department again. 

This portfolio documents law enforcement during a period which is now being scrutinized by people examining ways to bring about change to our criminal justice system.  I don’t know of any other photographer who had the access and vantage point that I did during this era.

Other Artists in the Exhibition

I am pleased that my work is being exhibited with the other photographers and lens-based artists listed below. Collectively their accomplishments include a Pulitzer Prize, multiple Photo Lucida Critical Mass Finalists, and photographs in many prestigious permanent collections. Four of us live in Los Angeles, two in New York City, and the rest live in the following: San Francisco, Indiana, Mississippi, and Jason is in the Midwest. Hopefully you will take a moment to follow these links and learn more about their work:

Aline Smithson Instagram Web Site Linktree

  • I first met Aline ten years ago at the Medium Festival in San Diego and she interviewed me for Lenscratch about my Santa Anita portfolio and book. Aline has also featured Justin Carney’s work twice in Lenscrach as an emerging artist.

Ashleigh Coleman Instagram Web Site

Denise Laurinaitis Instagram Web Site

Justin Carney Instagram Web Site Linktree

Preston Gannaway Instagram Web Site Linktree

Michael Young Instagram Web Site Linktree

Simone Lueck Instagram Web Site

& Alternate Artists: Diane Meyer and Jason Lindsey

In Photography Exhibitions, Museums, Photography, Galleries Tags William Karl Valentine, Aline Smithson, Ashleigh Coleman, Denise Laurinaitis, Justin Carney, Michael Young, Preston Gannaway, Simone Lueck, Gregory Harris, High Museum, Atlanta Photography Group, Atlanta, Shana Lopes, Donna Garcia, Diane Meyer, Jason Lindsey, David Clifton-Strawn, Nicole LeCorgne, @donnagarcia23, @lopesshana, @atlantaphotographygroup, Medium Photo
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Phoenix Art Museum - Fashioning Self: The Photography of Everyday Expression

May 16, 2023

Fashioning Self: The Photography of Everyday Expression examines the role of photography in shaping, sharing, and shifting identity. March 8th through November 5th 2023

I made my annual pilgrimage to Arizona in March to photograph a few Cactus League games. On the 18th I left the Angels game at Tempe Diablo Stadium a few minutes early so I could stop by the Phoenix Art Museum on the drive back to California, I didn’t bother to check beforehand what was being shown because the Phoenix Art Museum has never disappointed me; it is also an amazing space which is interesting in its own right.

The featured Photography exhibition had 54 works of street, documentary, and self-portrait prints curated to examine the long-intertwined relationship between people’s use of fashion for self-expression and photography’s role in documenting it over a century of time.  The exhibition was organized by the Phoenix Art Museum and the Center for Creative Photography.  I didn’t see the curators listed for this exhibition, but I assume Becky Senf was very involved in this project.

I have a simple sense of fashion, I live in T-shirts, basketball shorts, and baseball hats (fitted & prefer wool 59Fifty’s) most days.  So, an exhibition dealing with fashion shouldn’t be where you would find me.  But this exhibition had Max Yavno and Garry Winogrand photographs in it, and they are two of my favorite photographers. 

The exhibition is curated so well, the curators had knowledge of works I had never seen before, and they brought everything together perfectly to tell this story.  Just the design of the exhibition layout is so creative. How the various prints were grouped, the use of video, and incorporating an interactive Instagram component all come together to create a perfect experience.  It is not like the old days where the selected works were just hung in a line, and it was more about the individual prints or paintings.  The creativity of the curators shows through. This exhibition is timely and a great document of part of our history, the Phoenix Art Museum and CCP staff nailed it.  Below are my images of the exhibition.

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I wasn’t that familiar with Bill Cunningham’s work but it was a perfect addition to this exhibition. They had a video installation showing Bill working and his photographs. Bill was definitely a street photographer, but when I picked up of his book, which I bought in the Museum shop, I learned that he considered himself a fashion historian before being a photographer. He was good at both.

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View fullsize Selfie
View fullsize Self Portrait

Selfie on the left, a self portrait, with the help of Adam from Phoenix Art Museum staff on the right. Below are examples of the interactive Instagram component of the exhibit. Notice my classic T-shirt and hat style, perfect for a day at the yard watching ball (and looking at art and driving 350 miles comfortably). #PhxArtFashioningSelf .

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The Geoffrey Beene exhibit was outstanding, and it was because of the design of the space. Graphic colors and patterns, how the mannequins are posed, and the incorporation of the fashion still photographs & proof sheets, just come together amazingly. The curators had incredible vision to be able to take the artifacts they had and create this space. The exhibition is obviously static but had the feel of action the way it was designed. I loved how they worked the photography component in too, it added to the experience perfectly.

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More photographs of the Phoenix Art Museum. I love the scale and design of this space, plus I always discover artwork I didn’t know about every time I visit. Phillip C. Curtis’s paintings are fantastic and I love Rebecca Campbell’s “Jack and Diane”; humor in the title and the painting style was so unique how it dealt with the light.

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Miguel Palma’s(1964) “Action Plan” (2009) was on display near the Museum Store and immediately grabbed my attention. Miguel is just a year younger than I am, so I assume he grew up with G.I. Joes like I did. I understand the psychology behind why societies have had toy soldiers for their boys to play with, and I recognize the horror of war, but as a kid I loved my collection of G.I. Joes and spent lots of days outside in the dirt playing with them. This collection of accessories is epic. I appreciate the deeper meaning here, but with every piece of artwork on display, each view brings their own past experiences with them when they experience the work. A nice work of art but I am still also jealous of this collection.

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In Galleries, Museums, Photography, Photography Exhibitions Tags @phxart, #PhxArtFashion, #GeoffreyBeene, #Selfie, #Selfportrait, Doris and John Norton Gallery, Becky Senf, Eduard van det Eisken, Louis Carlos Bernal, Milton Rogovin, Charles "Teenie" Harris, Lila and Joel Hartnett Gallery, #Move, Authentic Brands Group, Deanna McBrearty, Rebbeca Campbell, Phillip C. Curtis, David Hume Kennerly, Dennis Feldman, Max Yavno, Garry Winogrand, Bill Cunningham, Center for Creative Photography, Vogue, Roger Minick, Richard Sandler, Joan Lifton, Helen Levitt, Andrew Eccles, Lee Bontecon, Sin titulp, Miguel Palma, Action plan, @cntrforcreativephoto, Laura Volkerding, @beckysenfccp
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At the APG 2022 Selects opening with High Museum Curator Gregory Harris who curated the Selects exhibition. 10-20-22

Atlanta Photography Group - 2022 Selects - Gregory Harris, Curator

December 9, 2022

In October I flew to Atlanta for the opening of the Atlanta Photography Group’s Gregory Harris Selects 2022 exhibition. 

This exhibition was APG’s feature exhibition for Atlanta Celebrates Photography (ACP) 2022, the month-long, citywide photography festival. The Exhibition was open themed and juried by Gregory Harris, the Keough Family Curator of Photography at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta.

APG’s Program Director Nicole LeCorgne introduces Gregory Harris at the opening on October 20th.

I have been a member of APG for several years and this was the fourth APG exhibition I have had work featured in.  Concurrent to this exhibition I also had two photographs up at Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport in APG’s annual airport show, which was juried by Lisa Volpe the Associate Curator of Photography at The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.  I also had a photograph in the APG’s 2022 Street Photography exhibition, curated by Henry Horenstein, which proceeded this exhibition. I have been so impressed with how professional everyone at APG is and the list of guest jurors they have brought in the last few years is amazing.  So having the opportunity to see my photographs up in two separate exhibitions, and to also meet a curator like Gregory Harris, I jumped on a flight and headed to Atlanta.  This was also an opportunity for me to visit Atlanta for the first time and explore a region of our country I need to get to know better.

I was honored as soon as I found out Gregory selected my photographs for the exhibition. I knew Gregory has an impressive curatorial resume and focuses on documentary photography when I submitted work for consideration.  I also knew the High Museum has a prominent photography collection.  Below his is statement about the exhibition:

The photographs gathered here are all straightforward pictures that respond to the wonders of quotidian human experience —the abiding pleasures of family and friends, the unexpected beauty of our built environment, the sheer marvel of the natural world—yet plumbing the depths of ordinary life offers boundless possibility for revelation. What links these seemingly disparate images is that their makers felt very little need to overly orchestrate them, and each was masterful at turning the most mundane situations into discretely poetic records of simply what was there before their cameras.  – Gregory Harris

When I landed in Atlanta the day before the opening and immediately went to see the airport exhibition after getting my luggage, it was nice to finally see the space since I have had photographs in the airport exhibition twice now.  The next day I went to the Atlanta Photography Group in the morning to see the exhibition before the opening.  The APG space is outstanding, it has great linear wall space with a high ceiling and is laid out perfectly for a gallery. I was also happy to see that both of my photographs had prominent positioning in the center of the primary wall.  I knew then I had made the right decision to fly back for the opening. 

Going to see the exhibition early also gave me the opportunity to really get to know Nicole LeCorgne who is APG’s Program Director and a Curator.  It was fantastic having so much time to learn about APG, the Atlanta photography community, and Nicole’s photography background.

Nicole LeCorgne, Caroline Hollingsworth, Beth Lilly, and William Karl Valentine

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APG Member Benjamin Dimmitt

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View fullsize Peter Essick's Photographs

At the opening I was able to meet several APG’s board members and other long-time members who helped lay the foundation for this outstanding group.  This gave me the chance to go to dinner with Benjamin Dimmitt, Mark Caceres, Peter Essick, Chip Standifer, and Beth Lilly after the opening. It was exciting to learn more about how vibrant the Atlanta photography community is and to just spend the time talking about the medium.  The APG membership has a strong core of established photographers as well as many young emerging photographers, it is a nice mix. For example, I heard 22-year-old Joshua Walls tell us this was his first prominent exhibition when he spoke during the opening. For me, this was my 50th exhibition. The only thing I missed out on this trip was being able to meet APG Executive Director and Curator Donna Garcia in person because she had to be out of town that week.  I have corresponded with Donna numerous times coordinating submissions and she has always been so helpful and professional. Donna is obviously taking APG to the next level.

Holding my photograph from the Street Photography exhibition which preceded the 2022 Selects exhibition. All three photographs were printed on Hahnemuhle Photo Rag ULTRASMOOTH Fine Art Paper and framed by Digital Arts Studio.

I also need to mention Digital Arts Studio in Atlanta and owner Barry Glustoff.  I have used DAS to print and frame the photographs for both of my APG exhibitions this year.  Their product is outstanding, they made the deadlines, and their fees were very appropriate.  I am thankful for their work in really helping my images stand out.  Digital Arts Studio is a qualified Hahnemuhle FineArt Certified Studio, one of fewer than two dozen in the United States as well as an accredited Canson Certified Lab and it shows in their product.

The Exhibition ran from October 17th to November 17th, 2022, and included the following participating artists:

Allison Plass
Beate Sass
Benjamin Dimmitt
Dana Weiss
Daniel Raniner
Ellen Mertins
Gwen Julia
Jo Ann Chaus
John Prince
Joshua Walls
Louis Leon

Mark Caceres
Nancy Marshall
Nate Mathews
Peter Essick
Reid Childers
Ross Landenberger
Seth Cook
Stephanie Hanlon
Willard Pate
William Karl Valentine
Zak Henderson

In Galleries, Photography, Photography Exhibitions Tags Atlanta Photography Group, Atlanta, Gregory Harris, High Museum, 2022 Selects, Lisa Volpe, Allison Plass, Beate Sass, Benjamin Dimmitt, Dana Weiss, Daniel Raniner, Ellen Mertins, Gwen Julia, Jo Ann Chaus, John Prince, Joshua Walls, Louis Leon, Mark Caceres, Nancy Marshall, Nate Mathews, Peter Essick, Reid Childers, Ross Landenberger, Seth Cook, Stephanie Hanlon, Willard Pate, Zak Henderson, Beth Lilly, Chip Standifer, Nicole LeCorgne, Donna Garcia, Digital Arts Studio, Barry Glustoff, Hahnemuhle Photo Rag ULTRASMOOTH
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LACMA’s Wallis Annenberg Photography Department Curator Rebecca Morse by Robert Heineken’s images.

"Objects of Desire" - curated by Rebecca Morse - LACMA through December 18th 2022

November 16, 2022

On October 7th I had the incredible opportunity to spend two hours talking one on one with Rebecca Morse at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art viewing the exhibition “Objects of Desire”.

Rebecca Morse is coming up on her 10-year anniversary as a Curator in the Wallis Annenberg Photography Department at LACMA. Prior to LACMA she spent 15 years as a curator at MOCA in Los Angeles. Originally from upstate New York, Rebecca worked for a commercial photographer in New York City and earned her Master’s degree at the University of Arizona before moving to Los Angeles. Rebecca curated the “Objects of Desire” exhibition and authored the accompanying catalogue for the exhibition.

Here is LACMA’s Statement for the exhibition:

“Objects of Desire: Photography and the Language of Advertising traces the artistic manipulation of advertising, the most powerful, mainstream visual language. Since the 1970s, creative innovations led to dramatic shifts in the possibilities for photography as artistic expression, as photo-based artists reworked advertising strategies to challenge the increased commodification of daily life, and later to appropriate the command these images have over the viewer/consumer. By exploiting advertising’s visual vocabulary and adopting its sites and formats, and through re-photography, appropriation, and simulation, artists create a shared photographic language that puts the onus on the viewer to determine what exactly these pictures are asking of us.”

I appreciate diversity in photographic styles although I always gravitate toward documentary images because that is my style. I think it is important that all genres of photography are showcased, and I try to view as many different types of photographs as I can to keep up my knowledge of the medium.  Viewing other images and talking about photography always helps me refocus on my own work.  My expectation in viewing Objects of Desire was that I would learn something new and hopefully see a couple images I could connect with.

The Objects of Desire exhibition exceeded my expectations. It is truly amazing, one of the tightest exhibitions I have seen.  It has some images I was familiar with, some work by photographers I had never heard of, and some totally unique pieces like Urs Fishcer’s “Mirror Box” series.  What made this exhibition so outstanding is how Rebecca Morse curated and designed the installation such that seemingly eclectic works when put together are in fact totally congruent with the goal of the exhibition.  The pairings make perfect sense when you follow the chronology and sequence of the installation.

Obviously, there is nothing like viewing an exhibition with the curator who is sharing insights on how they constructed the exhibition. That was a huge advantage for me.  But if the average viewer follows the wall signage the story is laid out in a clear, concise and easy way to understand manner.  I don’t think Rebecca missed a single detail; the show accomplishes exactly what the statement says.

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I had never met Rebecca before, and I earned this private tour by winning a fundraising bid for the Los Angeles Center of Photography, so I didn’t fully know what to expect.  What I discovered is an amazing photography professional. 

I gained a ton of insight into the curator’s mind with this visit, which was one of my goals.  Rebecca talked about how the concept for the exhibition formulated over many years, and as I expected her interests and experience were the foundation.  There was one specific image (Ericka Beckman’s 1987 image “Spoonful”) I had never seen before.  Rebecca explained that she had seen the photograph years ago, how the image stayed in the back of her mind, and when she had the right exhibition for it, she remembered it.  We also talked a lot about presentation and design of the space. I loved hearing about the many details and fine adjustments, and I could see how each thing she mentioned made the exhibition better.  We ended up talking about every piece.  I knew that Rebecca had worked with Robert Heineken when she was at the University of Arizona and the Center for Creative Photography was adding Heineken’s archive to their collection.  I enjoyed the opportunity to talk to Rebecca about his work given her firsthand connection to it and that’s why I made a point to photograph Rebecca by Heineken’s work. 

View fullsize Sarah Charlesworth: Figures, 1983-84, Cibachrome with lacquered wood frame, 2 panels, 42 by 32 inches each
Sarah Charlesworth: Figures, 1983-84, Cibachrome with lacquered wood frame, 2 panels, 42 by 32 inches each
View fullsize Vikky Alexander’s “St. Sebastian”
Vikky Alexander’s “St. Sebastian”
View fullsize  Urs Fishcer’s “Mirror Box” series
Urs Fishcer’s “Mirror Box” series
View fullsize  Asha Schechter’s 2020 print “Junk Drawer”
Asha Schechter’s 2020 print “Junk Drawer”

I found it particularly interesting when Rebecca pointed out the reflective qualities of Sarah Charlesworth’s Cibachrome “Figures” and Vikky Alexander’s “St. Sebastian” and how the viewer’s reflection on the surface of the prints was such an important element of the viewer’s experience.  The importance of the reflective quality of Urs Fishcer’s “Mirror Box” series was more apparent, but in talking with Rebecca I learned the placement of each box had been carefully considered.  If a box was moved one way or another the reflected background would be completely different.  Asha Schechter’s 2020 print “Junk Drawer” is unlike any other exhibition photograph I have ever seen. It is an inkjet print on adhesive vinyl and it was made specifically for this exhibition and the precise location in the gallery where the print hangs. The drawer which was photographed to create the image has reflective surfaces although the print itself does not have reflective qualities. But when you look at the print it appears those reflective surfaces are mirroring the lights and other objects in the room because Schechter actually photographed the room during installation and added those elements to his print to appear as if they are reflections. The perspective of the drawer also seems off with the back of the drawer appearing to be bigger than the front of the drawer which is closest to the viewer. In the catalogue Rebecca describes this print as being based on reality but feeling “off kilter”, she’s right, I found it to be subtly bothersome and I respect that.

I also enjoyed listening to her thoughts on the scale of certain pieces and the overall design element regarding placement of work.  I know how much effort I put in to editing my own work, it takes a lot of time and focus, but to hear Rebecca talk about her curatorial process for an exhibition of this scale is a completely different level.

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One other thing I enjoyed on my visit was watching other patrons view the exhibition.  Rebecca also liked being in the gallery when no one realized she was the exhibition curator so she could stand back and see what people were drawn to and how they experienced the exhibition.

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Rebecca also authored the accompanying catalogue for the exhibition which is one of the best exhibition catalogues I have ever seen.  It explains the overall exhibition nicely and showcases many details about individual works.  If you get the book and read the Acknowledgements you also get insight in to how many people are involved in producing an exhibition of this scale too, it definitely takes a good team. David Karwan designed the catalogue and he did a fantastic job capturing the magazine / advertising spirit in a beautifully published book.  LACMA co-published the book with DelMonico  Books.

The Exhibition runs until December 18th, and I highly recommend a visit.

 
In Museums, Photography Books, Photography Exhibitions Tags William Karl Valentine, Rebecca Morse, Robert Heineken, Sarah Charlesworth, Vikky Alexander, Urs Fishcer, Ericka Beckman, Center for Creative Photography, LACMA, Los Angeles, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, MOCA, David Karwan, Los Angeles Center of Photography, DelMonico Books, Photography, Objects of Desire, Asha Schechter
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