LA JOLLA, CA.- Joseph Bellows Gallery announces its exhibition, Drawn to Light. This group exhibition features seascape photographs by Anthony Friedkin, Steve Kahns Corridor series, and architectural images by Grant Mudford. The exhibition opened on Saturday the 16th of May. The exhibition will continue through the 3rd of July 2015.
The title, Drawn to Light refers to photographys intrinsic ability to render its subject by the agency of light, as well as each of the photographers: Friedkin, Kahn and Mudfords acute sensibility to portray a specific quality of light that shapes the descriptive and emotional content of their photographs: breaking waves, foreboding corridors, and urban facades. Along with this connectivity, the three photographers represented in Drawn to Light, have lived and worked in Los Angeles during the same period, thus uniting each photographers work, and its relation to the history of photography in California.
Anthony Friedkins tonally rich black and white images of the Pacific Ocean depict the force and the quietude of its waveforms. Each wave is pictured isolated and unique, while suggesting the larger context of the surrounding ocean. The resulting photographs reveal the momentum, formal beauty and reflective grace of the surf. As one looks at the photographs, it becomes clear that the artist is observing and understanding the waves as both photographer and surf rider. The images included in the exhibition are part of a larger project that spans several decades of recording the ocean and its culture.
Friedkins photographs are in the collections of numerous institutions including: the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and the Museum of Modern Art. Monographs by Friedkin include: Time Keeper (2003) and the Gay Essay (2014), both with introductions by Julian Cox.
Steve Kahns The Corridors was the last segment of the artists series, The Hollywood Suites, which began in 1979. The images that comprise the Corridor pictures explore the hallways that connect the private rooms of old apartment buildings in Los Angeles. Pictured under dim light, each corridor reveals a sense of luminance, whether natural or artificial, glowing within a veil of darkness, pulling the viewer toward one of the unknown rooms.
The Corridor images, were originally photographed with Polaroid 108 color film, and then re-photographed on 4x5 transparency film to achieve a larger printed scale. These images were then displayed in four one-point perspectives. Recently the artist has revisited this project focusing on several single images. Utilizing new technologies in image processing and printing, he has created reinterpretations of this work through large-scale pigmented inkjet prints.
Steve Kahns photographs are held within the collections of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Museum of Fine Arts Houston, Bibliotheque Nationale, among others. He was the receipt of a Photographer Fellowship form the National Endowment of the Arts.
Kahns Corrdors, will be the topic of a forthcoming one-picture book from Nazraeli Press, who in 2014 published Kahns monograph, The Hollywood Suites.
Grant Mudfords large-scale, brilliantly luminous black and white prints exhibit a meticulous sharpness that depict both their subject and the light that shapes it form, with an astonishing exactitude and beauty. His work has been described by Keith Davis in, An American Century of Photography, as An appreciation for both the alienations and incongruities of the urban landscape. This investigation of the psychology of place is complimented by Mudfords ardent observations on pictorial space and the inherent formal characteristics of his medium.
His photographs have been exhibited internationally in both solo and group exhibitions since the mid 1970s, beginning this exhibition history with a solo show at the notable Light Gallery.
Grant Mudfords photographs are in the collections of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, J. Paul Getty Museum, Museum of Modern Art, George Eastman House, Nelson-Atkins Museum, National Museum of American Art, among others. In 2014, Mudford was awarded the Julies Shulman Institute Award for Excellence in Photography. Other awards include a Photographers Fellowship form the National Endowment for the Arts.