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William Karl Valentine

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Fahey Klein Gallery - Los Angeles

Lauren Greenfield: Social Studies at Fahey Klein Gallery

August 1, 2025

Unfortunately, I was not able to make this opening and only got to see the exhibition just before it closed a few weeks ago, but the work is incredible, and I wanted to make sure I wrote something about it.

I think Lauren is an incredible photographer and I think her body of work will be an important archive for future generations attempting to understand the societal changes which have occurred with the growth of cellular phones and massive amount of available digital content we have experienced in the first quarter of this century.

Like most every good documentary photographer the biggest key to her success gaining access and building trust with the people she is photographing. She also has technical skills and crafts powerful images. I have known about Lauren’s work for some time, and I specifically remember years ago, when my daughter was a teen, she found Lauren’s book 2002 book “Girl Culture” on my bookshelf, and she fell in love with it.

Fahey Klein describes the exhibition as follows:

Lauren Greenfield: Social Studies, a new photographic exhibition that revisits the terrain of youth culture and identity formation in the digital age. Expanding on her acclaimed five-part docuseries of the same name, Social Studies (FX/Hulu) marks Greenfield’s return to a subject she has explored since her groundbreaking 1997 debut, Fast Forward: Growing Up in the Shadow of Hollywood.

Shot during the 2021–2022 school year across Los Angeles—a city synonymous with image and aspiration—Social Studies follows a diverse group of teens navigating high school, home life, and relationships under the influence of ever-present social media. This new body of work builds on Greenfield’s legacy as a visual sociologist, capturing the tensions between online performance and private identity, aspiration and anxiety, vulnerability and self-curation. Lauren Greenfield’s photographic approach parallels her immersive filmmaking: both document a reality that is evolving in real-time.

Lauren Greenfield: Social Studies is a continuation and an evolution of the artist’s decades-long interrogation of American culture. Through the raw honesty of her subjects and the clarity of her vision, Greenfield creates a powerful meditation on adolescence, what she calls “comparison culture”, and the search for authenticity in a curated world. As she continues to investigate the themes of status, beauty, identity, and power, this new series reflects her ongoing commitment to making the invisible visible—revealing how young people see themselves and how we construct and consume those images.

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The most incredible element of this exhibit is the fact most subjects allowed Greenfield’s team to capture thousands of hours of their screen time. Greenfield then edited the material and combined images of screen capture with her portraits to make an incredible montage that most accurately documents the experience these teens are having online. It is so well done and so powerful. Another incredible thing with Greenfield’s subject is many attended Pali High which was destroyed in the Pacific Palisades Fire this past January. That fact deepens the value of this project for me.

As a street photographer I have long been aware of the impact that the cell phone has had on our society. I remember photographing in New York during the summer of 1988 and how banks of payphones were commonplace, and they were gathering spots for teens. In the late 1990’s to early 2000’s I would see more and more cellphones in my photographs each year and less payphones. Today it is nearly impossible to photograph on the street without seeing someone on the phone or someone holding a phone. People are absorbed by the content on their phones and many young ladies seem to walk with phones in their hands as if they phones provide some amount of immediate security. The impact of the cellphone is obviously a double-edged sword and worthy of its own blog post later, I just mention this because I am glad Lauren did such a deep dive into the subject and that she it did it so well.


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I also picked up a copy of Lauren’s massive 500-page 2017 book “Generation Wealth” on my visit (I already had copies of Fast Forward and Girl Culture in my library). The book is an incredible documentation of wealthy societies and individuals. I am in awe how many places she has been able to get to and the images she has captured. The logistics of travel alone would be more of a challenge than I could handle let alone the photographing and filming aspect. There is one epic point in this book (pages 226-227) where she documents New Years Eve parties in St. Bartz. On Page 226 there is a 1998 image with Harvey Weinstein talking with Arista Records’s Clive Davis and Sir Michael Caine. There was a comment in the title that people knew they had status when they were invited to Davis’s New Years Eve party. On the opposite page was an image of Diddy (29-year-old Sean Combs at the time) at his 1999 New Years Eve party at Feeling Nightclub making a woman expose her breast to gain access to his party. It is an amazing pairing of images especially when you consider the book was first published in 2017, a year before Weinstein was arrested.

There is so much content in this book I probably won’t ever get through it all, but it is an incredible document that will provide future generation of researchers lots of material to consider. I have so much respect for Lauren as a photographer, she has been able to capture so many amazing images that document our era.

I also want to thank Heather Cronan and Nicole Boyle at Fahey Klein for their time pointing out some incredible details in the exhibition. I have talked with them on other visits, and they have always been great hosts who are obviously passionate about the medium of photography.

In Artist, Galleries, Documentary Films, Photography, Photography Books Tags Fahey Klein Gallery, Los Angeles, Lauren Greenfield, Documentary Photography, Heather Cronan, Nicole Boyle, Generation Wealth, Girl Culture, Fast Forward
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Historian Lucy Worsley with a Kodak Box Brownie from her documentary on photographing the royal family

Historian Lucy Worsley with a Kodak Box Brownie from her documentary on photographing the royal family

Lucy Worsley's Royal Photo Album

May 12, 2021

“A king, or a queen, is less mighty than the power of a camera.”

Lucy Worsley

 

First and foremost, I need to say I am not in to all the current television series about the British Royals or Victorian life, so that is not the reason for authoring this post.  I decided to author this post because of the solid job Lucy Worsely did showcasing how important photography has been for the British monarchy since the beginning of the medium.

1839 is generally considered to be the year photography began.  Louis Dagueere announced his Daguerreotyope process in France and William Henry Fox Talbot announced his calotype negative and salt print process in England.   Nicéphore Niépce also needs to be recognized for his work in the mid 1820’s capturing and fixing images with a camera, although those photographs took hours and days to expose.

Photography, including videos & film, is arguably the most powerful tool for communicating.  Images can be understood universally, nothing needs to be translated, a person does not even need to literate to experience a photograph.

The saying “A photograph is worth a thousand words” is so true.  But I think it is important that we need to recognize a photograph that documents 1/400th of a second of time in history has limitations.  It often does not tell the whole story and can be taken out of context as can video clips.  We are experiencing this daily now as everything seems to be livestreamed or documented by someone.  As a quick sidenote I looked up the saying above for the history and found that in March 1911 the Syracuse Post-Standard attributed Tess Flanders as the first to say “Use a picture. It’s worth a thousand words”.  Tess was at banquet to discuss journalism and publicity at the time.

I have long been aware of photographic portraits of Queen Victoria; she most likely was photographed more than anyone else in her period.  I had not given any real thought to the fact she was using photography as a means of communicating to her people.  Lucy Worsley highlighted this fact in her PBS episode Royal Photo Album.  Lucy showed how Victoria changed how her portraits were done to reflect her life.  Emotionless face with black garments following the death of her beloved Prince Albert and the decade of morning then realizing she needed to be more personable to reengage people after that.  It was fascinating how the royal family used photography early on to maintain their public image by documenting their lives, then how photography began to damage their family brand when the royals were no longer able to control the images and subject matter.  Scandals were captured and exposed to the world.

I had no idea that Queen Alexandra was such a prolific photographer, obtaining a Kodak Box Brownie soon after it was released to the market.  Because of her access she made incredibly intimate photographs of the royal family and I had no idea she published a hugely popular book of her photographs.  Alexandra highlights the fact photography was accessible to women photographers since the beginning.  I also believe the medium has progressed since then to be the most inclusive artform.

This documentary also highlighted the work of Anwar Hussein, a long time official royal photographer, and some of Cecil Beaton’s images including how he created Queen Elizabeth’s official coronation portrait.

I happened to see this 2020 documentary this morning by accident while changing channels.  It is on PBS, if you have a membership, you can access it online, otherwise I would encourage you to check TV listings for the next airing.  For anyone with an interest in the history of photography, the history of the royal family, or the impact imagery has on our world it is well worth the time to watch this program.

Queen Alexandra with one her of cameras

Queen Alexandra with one her of cameras

In Documentary Films, Photography Tags Queen Elizabeth, Lucy Worsley, PBS, Anwar Hussein, Cecil Beaton, Queen Alexandra, Royal Photography, Documentary Films, Documentary Photography, Kodak
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