Ed Ruscha
Doheny Towers
Ed Ruscha: ‘Apartments, Parking Lots, Palm Trees and Others’ Monika Sprüth and Philomene Magers are pleased to present an exhibition of work by Ed Ruscha in Berlin,featuring early photographs, drawings as well as two filmic works.
ED RUSCHA ‘Apartments, Parking Lots, Palm Trees and Others:Films, Photographs and Drawings from 1961 to 1975’
03/09/10 – 23/10/10
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Source: Sprüth Magers Berlin
Monika Sprüth and Philomene Magers are pleased to present an exhibition of work by Ed Ruscha in Berlin,featuring early photographs, drawings as well as two filmic works.
Since the early 1960s, Ed Ruscha has created an extensive painterly, graphical, and photographic oeuvre.Ruscha first considered working as a graphic artist but soon developed a deep passion for painting andphotography. Inspired by the American photography of the 1940s and 1950s, Ruscha developed anindependent conceptual approach which is manifested in the sixteen photo-books, created between 1963 and1978, in which he offered a fresh interpretation of the idea of the artist’s book. These small, unpretentiousbooks, which Ruscha always issued in a limited edition, anticipated with their titles in a laconic manner theentire contents of the books, for example Twentysix Gasoline Stations (1963); Various Small Fires and Milk(1964); Some Los Angeles Apartments (1965); Every Building on the Sunset Strip (1966) as well as ThirtyfourParking Lots in Los Angeles (1967) or Nine Swimmingpools and a Broken Glass (1968). They show howRuscha broke away from the traditions of the genre and simultaneously distanced himself from the subjectivist,analytical photo-books of such author-photographers as Robert Frank and Walker Evans. Coming to the forehere, instead of pictorial sequences ordered according to formal and contentual critiera, was a serialarrangement in which the disregard of classical conventions of photography, namely the requirements ofperspective and composition, became a characteristic of his photographic aesthetic. Ruscha’s pictures map outthe redundant appearance of the West Coast civilization of the USA through the monotony and repetitiveness ofthe series.
Although Ed Ruscha considers himself to be a painter and draftsman rather than a photographer, in 1999 heissued thirty motifs from his artist book Thirtyfour Parking Lots (1967/1999). His procedure of selection for thereedited photographs was intuitive. He described it in this way: ‘Originally, I thought that the pictures were ameans to an end, a vehicle to make a book. And then along the way there was some gear shifting. Over theyears, I began to appreciate print quality and see my photographs as not necessarily reproductions for a book,but as having their own life as silver gelatin prints.‘(*) The exhibition presents works which are characteristic ofRuscha’s photographic oeuvre, and which arose in the context of the artist-books but are not necessarily a partof them. For example, the black silhouette of the palm tree, which originally adorned the main motif of the artistbookentitled A Few Palm Trees (1971), was later featured as an autonomous photograph in the series PalmTrees (1971/2003). Furthermore, Ruscha combined a selection of ‘outtakes‘ into the portfolio Real EstateOpportunities (1970/2003), which brings together photographs of unattractive building sites with subtle irony.
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