Larry Sultan "Here and Home" at LACMA
The first retrospective of the work of iconic California photographer Larry Sultan, โHere and Home,โ features more than 200 photographs and five major seriesโ, displaying his keen eye for subversive detail, framing, and context which made him one of the most genre-pushing purveyors of the medium. Sultan died suddenly five years ago, after producing more than 30 years of photographs that mostly centered around long-term projects that explored authorship, Conceptualism, and California identity and culture.
His โEvidenceโ series, made with Mike Mandel from 1975-77 , repurposed internal imagery science, industry, and government as art photography. The 59 black-and-white archival photographsโ of a canyon explosion, of an abstracted head in a hardhat, of bare footprints across a wet stone groundโ are reconsidered as scenes of life captured by an auteur: it is widely considered one of the first Conceptual photography projects. In his solo work, Sultan looked closely at Southern California, where he grew up, as well as Northern California where he studied and later taught. His interest in place, reflected in the exhibition title, is perhaps nowhere as apparent as in โPictures from Home,โ for which he photographed his aging parents for years among the furnishings of their California-kitsch home and on their impossibly green lawn. But beyond sense of place, Sultan measured the distance between photographer and subject, and the objective space the photographer continually takes up and cedes. โWhat drives me to continue this work is difficult to name,โ he wrote in a statement on the work in 1992. โIt has more to do with love than with sociology, with being a subject in the drama rather than a witness. And in the odd and jumbled process of working everything shifts; the boundaries blur, my distance slips, the arrogance and illusion of immunity falters.โ
Later photographs look more objectively at place, as in โHomeland,โ in which he posed migrant workers in the in-between places of suburban life, and โThe Valley,โ a documentation of the suburban homes where pornography is filmed. In the later, he often obscures the most provocative action, or the obvious, in favor of highlighting the obliquely personal, such as a sloppy floral arrangement left by the homeโs actual tenants. As he said in a 1990 interview with BOMB of the series, โAll the photographs raise the issue of voyeurismโitโs unavoidable. I mean, no one believes in photographs, right? Weโre much too sophisticated. Yet, in fact, we do.โ
โHere and Homeโ is on view through March 22.