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Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts
Book Review Soft Eyes Photographs by Henry Wessel, Austin Leong & Adrian Martinez Reviewed by Jacques Talbot "Soft Eyes presents a selection of photographs by the late Henry Wessel, alongside those by California-based photographers Austin Leong and Adrian Martinez, in an immaculately designed and thoughtfully curated volume that synthesizes rather than juxtaposes the unique sensibilities of these remarkable photographers..."

Soft Eyes by Henry Wessel, Austin Leong & Adrian Martinez.
https://www.photoeye.com/bookstore/citation.cfm?catalog=ZK667
Soft Eyes
Henry Wessel, Austin Leong & Adrian Martinez
Deadbeat Club, Los Angeles, CA, 2024. 84 pp., 11½x11½".

Soft Eyes presents a selection of photographs by the late Henry Wessel, alongside those by California-based photographers Austin Leong and Adrian Martinez, in an immaculately designed and thoughtfully curated volume that synthesizes rather than juxtaposes the unique sensibilities of these remarkable photographers.

In 1969, at the age of twenty-seven, Wessel arrived in California from Rochester, New York. He settled in Point Richmond and taught at the San Francisco Art Institute for the next forty years. Leong (b. 1990) and Martinez (b. 1990) grew up in Anaheim and Los Angeles respectively, both relocating to San Francisco in the five-year window between 2003 and 2008. What unifies these three photographers is their affinity for capturing California’s crisp, stark light on the textured surfaces of their surroundings. This carries through the selection of photographs, which are sequenced without accompanying dates or attributions. The photographs retrace the neighborhoods Wessel once frequented, and to which Leong and Martinez now turn their lenses.

Throughout Soft Eyes, there is a noticeable contrast between the photographs that convey the expanse of California’s car-friendly terrain and those that capture interpersonal encounters. This mirrors how Wessel frequently took photographs from his car but on occasion would emerge from his vehicle to make further frames on foot. Like Wessel, Leong’s work is occasionally framed by the passenger-side door or windscreen of his car. At other times, individual subjects fill the composition. In an interesting triangulation of images, Wessel depicts a woman resting upon a blanket spread in disarray upon the sand. Later, the shadow of Leong’s bicycled figure encroaches on a man splayed on the sidewalk, apparently sunbathing. In a subsequent frame, Martinez focuses upon a child lying awkwardly, and somewhat ominously, at the foot of a staircase leading to the beach. In each instance, the ambiguity invites us to draw our own conclusions.


Interstitial space, where the built environment abuts abundant natural growth, is another theme throughout Soft Eyes. To this end, Martinez depicts foliage perforating a geodesic dome containing the remainder of a tree, suggesting a glacial transference of power. Elsewhere, in a photograph by Leong, a large plant appears to explode through the breeze-block wall of a parking lot; the shadows of its fronds radiate outward, as if from the percussive force of the impact. Several frames later, in an image of a suburban homestead by Wessel, a shrub that has had one quadrant abruptly excised is made whole again by its own shadow. These slower images perhaps best exemplify Wessel’s conviction that the meaning of a photograph is elucidated from a combination of its appearance, the experiential knowledge of the viewer, and the viewer’s imagination.


Time and again, humor serves as the inter-connective tissue between the work of Leong, Martinez, and Wessel. In the yard of a bungalow, a small cat sits discreetly against a white picket fence. Nearby, a hanging sign reads “Little Honker’. Elsewhere, the outline of a leg, whose figure vanishes into the walled entrance of a property, is mimicked by the trailing arm of a plant that projects outward from the same property, casting a wide arc from above the street as if to avoid detection. A few frames later, the larger of two dogs peers into the dark interior of a structure through missing slats at the base of one of its doors. Meanwhile, a smaller canine peers down on it, apparently undetected, from the apex of its roof. These photographs exemplify each photographer’s acute receptivity to narrative within the infinite and forever evolving permutations of their surroundings.


Soft Eyes
culminates in an insightful essay by curator Allie Haeusslein, which dives deeper into the actively receptive state of ‘soft eyes’, a phrase coined by Wessel. He spoke at length about the importance of making an image as soon as interest registers, without deliberation or further investigation. Multiple works by Leong and Martinez demonstrate their adherence to this approach, and this overarching connection serves as the progenitor of the connections that follow:
“You’re kind of like a free agent between your instinct, your anticipation, and your intelligence, and all of those things… keep continually moving back and forth in a fluid way while you’re photographing”.
Soft Eyes is Todd Hido’s choice for Favorite Photobook of 2024, appearing alongside three other titles from standout publisher Deadbeat Club. Soft Eyes, however, is unique for drawing together the work of three photographers within a volume that is undeniably greater than the sum of its parts. The images by Leong, Martinez, and Wessel are shaped in part by California’s sunlight, but more so by Wessel’s philosophy. For these reasons, Soft Eyes has also proven to be my favorite photobook of 2024.

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Jacques Talbot is a photographer and writer based in Kingston, Ontario. His writing can be found in Border Crossings, Sculpture magazine, and the American Review of Canadian Studies.
Book Review Ecology of Dreams Photographs by Ewan Telford Reviewed by Brian Arnold "Manifest Destiny was the name given to the cultural doctrine that said we, as Americans, were a righteous people, and that it was our duty to expand our resources and take control over the land we envisioned as the United States of America..."

Ecology of Dreams By Ewan Telford.
https://www.photoeye.com/bookstore/citation.cfm?catalog=ZK119
Ecology of Dreams
Photographs by Ewan Telford

Velvet Cell, Berlin, Germany, 2022. In English. 176 pp.

Manifest Destiny was the name given to the cultural doctrine that said we, as Americans, were a righteous people, and that it was our duty to expand our resources and take control over the land we envisioned as the United States of America. It was the time of Deadwood, and together the railroad industry and the federal government strategized ways to take over the American West. In my mind, Los Angeles is the perfect metaphor for westward expansion, truly pushing us from east to west and north to south. It provided all the opportunities, vistas and dreams that characterized our ideal vision of the west — mountain views, some of the nation’s best beaches, a rich agricultural climate and plenty of land for the coming settlers. And at the heart of Los Angeles is Hollywood, the perfect expression of the American Dream — here even a small-town man can find stardom. Los Angeles is, after all, the city of dreams.

Of course, this was destined for failure, as was every other vision of empire. With Hollywood ever present as a backdrop, the city’s demise has inspired many incredible photobooks — Robert Adams’ Los Angeles Spring, ZZYZX by Magnum photographer Gregory Halpern, Karin Apollonia Muller’s mysterious color work in Angels in Fall, the rigorously mundane Candlestick Point by Lewis Baltz and Larry Sultan’s The Valley all come to mind. I’ve only been to LA once and don’t really have a desire to go back. I am sure there are lots of amazing things about the city, but it’s hard for me justify places like Las Vegas and Los Angeles — who had the idea to conquer these parched, sunny lands by invading them with swimming pools and glamour?


Born and educated in Scotland, photographer Ewan Telford’s newest book The Ecology of Dreams presents another look at the mythic city of our westward dreams. Telford has an interesting background — he’s from Scotland and finished an education in philosophy and film production before coming to New York to pursue a career in film and video production. Perhaps an itinerate career in the field, Ewan now lives in Los Angeles and works more as a photographer, exploring text/image narratives. The Ecology of Dreams, Telford’s second book, is full of beautiful photographs and ideas, true to all the icons, symbols, and tropes of the city. Made primarily with pictures of landscapes and interiors (very few people are to be seen), Telford juxtaposes photographs of Hollywood, wildfires, highway systems, wax museums, invasive species, water pipes, petroleum refineries and pedestrian neighborhoods, collectively creating a multilayered portrait of the city and all its contradictions and complexities, a dystopic vision of the American Dream. Each page spread is just one photograph, always on the right side, with the left page presenting different textual experiments Ewan developed in an attempt to encode the images with unexpected ideas.


I am much more engaged with Telford’s pictures than by his text. He is clearly a photographer always ready to make pictures, anywhere and anytime, and he couples this promiscuous style with a keen sense of light, color and photographic metaphor. Despite many great pictures, at 176 pages The Ecology of Dreams feels too long and the photographs under edited (I understand the need to include a picture of the iconic Hollywood sign, but more than once feels redundant — this happens with a few different types of images). I feel this way even more about the text. At times it coaxes surprising and evocative ideas from the photographs, at other times it feels forced and unnecessary, more a distraction than a benefit. After several viewings of the book, I feel like Telford was compelled to provide text for each image rather than having something unique and important for each page spread. For the most part, I find Telford’s photographs strong enough that they don’t need the textual supplements, and the range of pictures included in The Ecology of Dreams provides enough layers for a complex and interesting perspective on Los Angeles.


The Ecology of Dreams
was my first introduction to publisher Velvet Cell and looking over all their books I can see they have a unique vision within the glut of photobook publishers working today. Based in Europe, Velvet Cell’s books all look at urban landscapes around the world — with interesting books on cities as different as Beirut, Okinawa, Yangon, Phenom Penh and Budapest — and with a roster that includes some fantastic and well-established photographers like Toshio Shibata, Steve Fitch, Alejandro Cartagena and Peter Bialobrzeski. I will definitely keep an eye on future publications, and I am eager to see how their vision continues to develop.

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Brian Arnold
is a photographer, writer, and translator based in Ithaca, NY. He has taught and exhibited his work around the world and published books, including A History of Photography in Indonesia, with Oxford University Press, Cornell University, Amsterdam University, and Afterhours Books. Brian is a two-time MacDowell Fellow and in 2014 received a grant from the Henry Luce Foundation/American Institute for Indonesian Studies.