What the eye sees, what the camera sees, what the eye of the beholder of what the camera sees: that’s PhotoLA.
The art renaissance that is taking place in Los Angeles is coming to a momentous peak this January, with PhotoLA the first in a string of large scale events including the LA Art Show, Fabrik Expo, and Art Los Angeles Contemporary, which are all opening this week.
PhotoLA was held last weekend at The Reef, the cavernous 2nd floor space at LA Mart in DTLA. The opening night gala, benefiting Best Buddies, was crowded for the event’s tribute to Los Angeles artist James Welling.
The city’s longest-running art fair, PhotoLA ran the gamut of cutting edge pieces, historical photos, stunning landscapes, political art, abstract photos, and pop art. Eclectic panels populated the weekend, too, including provocative subjects such as “The Instagram Effect: How Instagram is Changing the Way We See Photography”; “Robert Mapplethorpe: Beyond Good and Evil”; and “Artists Take Issue: Perspectives and Practices in Activist Photography.”
What was our take? A wide range of exceptional pieces, with a number of standout independent photographers and curated group exhibitions.
The honoree of the opening gala, James Welling. This post-modern photographic artist has a storied career experimenting with a variety of photographic mediums from digital prints to Polaroids.
Some visual highlights: below, the haunting and riveting work of Kathy Curtis Cahill, whose art is dedicated to revealing “how fragile young children are, and how everything matters in the home environment.”
Fascinating historical photos – and the music of David Bowie.
Photo Pop Art – the striking and amusing work of Marianne Hess.
National Geographic landscape stunners – sometimes a straight forward shot of natural beauty evokes feelings beyond what is seen.
Below: a delightfully different approach to scene: the fine work of Osceola Refetoff, also a panel speaker on activist photography moderated by Shana Nys Dambrot. Refetoff’s work, among other cutting edge pieces, was curated by VICA, the non-profit Venice Institute of Contemporary Art.
Below: the opening night crowd viewing PhotoLA – reflected in a San Francisco skyline.
Artist Jeffry Sklan’s enormous – and enormously beautiful flowers, below. Impressive detail and color.
Artist Sklan below – photo by Nina Bonyak
To sum up: Photo LA presented an international eye on the world, vibrating through the lens of many Los Angeles area curators and artists. What you see is literally what you “get” out of interpreting an artist’s own unique vision of the world.
- Genie Davis