Los Angeles County Museum of Art: Catherine Opie's Figure and Landscape

EXCLUSIVE CATHERINE OPIE EXHIBITION TO OPEN AT LACMA
Features photographs centering on American sports and landscape
(Los Angeles, July 12, 2010)—The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) presents Catherine Opie: Figure and Landscape, featuring recent work by the internationally renowned and LA-based photographer Catherine Opie. The show’s primary focus is high-school football, a subject that allowed Opie to explore issues of masculinity, community, and national identity. On
view July 25 through October 17, 2010, the exhibition is curated by Britt
Salvesen, curator and head of the Wallis Annenberg Photography Department,
as well as the Prints and Drawings Department.
“Catherine Opie’s ability to craft beautiful and compelling pictures is matched by her awareness of art’s social and historical significance,” says Salvesen. “She is producing a true document of our time.”
Over the last three years, Opie photographed football games and players in
seven states across America: Alaska, California, Hawaii, Louisiana, New York, Ohio, and Texas. Atmospheric cues locate each regional site, while gestures and gazes reveal the adolescent players’ disparate psychologies. Looking past the clichés associated with football, Opie perceives diversity in the individuals and communities that celebrate the game.
Providing a point of departure for the football images are examples from the artist’s 2003 series of surfers in the Pacific Ocean, which lyrically situate human beings in elemental nature. A group of landscape photographs offers a concluding comment on our persistent attachment to purity as an attribute of nature. Working across the genres of portraiture and landscape, Opie has dedicated herself to documenting “this country and this culture.” This pursuit has led her to question assumptions about what is natural, whether in our surroundings or in our identities and behavior.
Keenly aware of art-historical standards and contemporary political attitudes, she purposefully creates photographs that function as objective records and subjective interpretations. Shown in conjunction with LACMA’s exhibition Manly Pursuits: The Sporting Images of Thomas Eakins, Opie’s work similarly addresses conventions of idealism and realism in the depiction of male athletes. Like photography itself, sports are associated with decisive moments. Even so, Opie finds moments of stasis: on the football field between plays or after practice, in the calm ocean between waves—all the while capturing the athletes’ capacity for complete absorption and heightened physical and mental awareness.
Credit
This exhibition was organized by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and
made possible by the Wasserman Foundation.
About LACMA
Since its inception in 1965, LACMA has been devoted to collecting works of art that span both history and geography-and represent Los Angeles's uniquely diverse population. Today, the museum features particularly strong collections of Asian, Latin American, European, and American art, as well as a contemporary museum on its campus.
With this expanded space for contemporary art, innovative collaborations with artists, and an ongoing Transformation project, LACMA is creating a truly modern lens through which to view its rich encyclopedic collection.
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