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By Anita Keys
Los Angeles is among the youngest of the world's major cities,
a place where the urban landscape is continually undergoing change.
Still, even within its relatively brief life, the city has accumulated
history, a history that has produced a wide variety of landmarksfrom
the whimsical to the sublime to the abstractly futuristic.
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View from the Chateau Marmont Hotel, Sunset Boulevard,
Hollywood / Daniel Hernandez |
For several years now, the Getty Conservation Institute has been
interested in learning more about Los Angeles landmarks. "Part of
our mandate is the preservation of cultural monuments as defined
by the community in which they exist," explains Miguel Angel Corzo,
Director of the GCI. "If we are to help preserve the heritage of
Los Angeles, our home community, we need to know as much as we can
about attitudes of people in Los Angeles regarding landmarks. How
do they define them? Do they provide the community with a sense
of identity or belonging? Do the various ethnic communities that
make up this city agree on what constitutes a landmark? Has the
city's changing demographic profile altered the function or importance
of particular landmarks?"
DICTIONARY DEFINTIONS OF A LANDMARK
1. A marker indicating a boundary line.
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Los Angeles River Tunnel / Abbey Fuchs |
In 1992 the GCI conducted an extensive study of the city's landmarks,
their relationship to the city's history, and their use by the people
of Los Angeles. Among other findings, the report indicated that
the city's cultural diversity was not a significant factor in the
designation of landmarks. "One of the things the 1992 study showed
us is that many groups traditionally have been underrepresented
in the city's official landmark programs," observes Mahasti Afshar,
Program Research Associate at the GCI. "Ethnic minorities and youth
are an important part of the picture of Los Angeles, and yet we
are totally in the dark as to how they relate to the city's cultural
landmarks."
In light of this, the idea arose to gather together a group of
ethnically diverse youths in order to learn more about different
viewpoints on what constitutes a landmark. "Specifically, we thought
that asking a group of young people to photograph sites they considered
to be landmarks would give us an insight into values that haven't
yet been recognized or documented," says Mr. Corzo.
2. A building or site having historical significance.
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Union Station / Sabrina Paschal |
From this idea, the Picture L.A. project was born. Award-winning Los
Angeles photographer Lauren Greenfield was asked to organize the photographic
project. Through referrals from school art programs and community centers, Ms.
Greenfieldwhose photographic assignments have ranged from Indian village
life in Chiapas, Mexico, to contemporary French aristocracyselected youths
from diverse cultural and geographic backgrounds. (see below)
Interest and motivation weighed as heavily in the selection process as prior
photographic experienceand these traits proved strong in the participants.
All eight who began the project successfully stayed with it.
During the three-month shooting period, the project's young participants
went into their own communities photographing personally significant
social and architectural landmarks. Though supervised by Ms. Greenfield
or one of her assistants, they chose their own subjects and perspectives.
Each developed such individuality that, in Ms. Greenfield's words,
"by the end of the project, we could tell an Abbey print from a
Younghee print from a Daniel print. That says a lot about how developed
their visions became and how honestly they were looking at the world
around them."
3. A prominent and identifying feature of a landscape, distinguishing
a locality.
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Hollywood Boulevard / Younghee Seo
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Group field trips were taken to the Getty Center under construction,
Watts Towers, Hollywood, Sunset Boulevard, Beverly Hills, and downtown
Los Angeles. Two group meetings also were held at the Conservation
Institute, one at the beginning of the project, another at a final
session during which participants reviewed one another's photographic
work.
In the sites chosen and the relationship revealed between the social
landscape and the physical environment, the black-and-white photographs
provide a striking vision of Los Angeles. Crenshaw Boulevard, for
example, is portrayed in the close-up of a lowrider; Sunset Boulevard
is identified by movie billboards merging with the lush vegetation
or by a swimmer creating graphic patterns in the pool at the Chateau
Marmont; devastation after the Malibu fire is contrasted with the
exuberance of an eight-year-old pedaling his toy tractor.
Adults involved in the project found their definition of landmarks
changed as a result of the photographs. "Prior to the project I
would have picked the Hollywood Bowl and the typically known sites
as the important places of Los Angeles," commented Jessica Karman,
a project assistant. "Now I look a little deeper."
Raul Herrera, one of the participants, became particularly fascinated
with a group of people occupying the Belmont Tunnel, an old building
close to downtown where every surface is covered with graffiti.
"Young people see that other side of L.A. that everyone else tries
to ignore," he says. "We can't ignore it because we live in it and
are part of it. I think adults try to filter out homelessness, but
to me it's part of our community."
4. An event marking a turning point in history.
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After the Malibu Fire / Ennis Beley
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The period of the project was a pivotal time for Los Angeles.
Still reeling from the riots, the city was further tested by fires,
mud slides, and earthquakes. For project participants such as Osofu
Washington, the destruction demonstrated the need for preservation
work. "When something has been there for a while it touches the
lives of people," he explains. "I never had a desire to preserve
things. Now I really care about things that may not be here two
years from now."
The project's culmination will be an exhibition at the Bridge Gallery
in Los Angeles City Hall in early December. Over 70 of the photographs
will be displayed. Complementing the exhibit will be color images
of the participants taken by Lauren Greenfield, a short video on
the project, and a catalogue of the exhibition photographs. The
exhibit subsequently will travel to other venues.
Anita Keys is a consultant for the Getty Conservation Institute and Project
Coordinator for Picture L.A.: Landmarks of a New Generation.
Participants in Picture L.A.
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Back row, left to right: Abbey Fuchs, Osofu Washington, Miguel
Angel Corzo, Lauren Greenfield, Raul Herrera, Sabrina Paschal.
Front row, left to right: Luis Castro, Ennis Beley, Daniel Hernandez,
Younghee Seo. Photo: Jessica Karman |
ENNIS BELEY is from South Central Los Angeles. Thirteen years old at
the time of the Picture L.A. project, he is presently in the seventh
grade at United World International School. Prior to working on Picture L.A.,
he videotaped his life for six months for a BBC documentary entitled "L.A. Stories."
He would like to be a journalist when he grows up.
LUIS CASTRO was born in San Salvador and currently lives in Koreatown.
Twelve years old during the project, he attends seventh grade at Crossroads
School in Santa Monica. He is not sure what he wants to be when he grows up.
Since Picture L.A. he has been photographing his trips to different places.
ABBEY FUCHS has lived in Hollywood since she moved from
New York at the age of three. Sixteen years old during the project,
she recently graduated from Fairfax High School where she studied
photography, among other subjects. Now attending Cal State Sonoma,
she is majoring in communications.
DANIEL HERNANDEZ is from Boyle Heights. Ten years old when
the project began, he is now in the sixth grade at Griffin Magnet
Jr. High School where he is studying one of his favorite subjectscomputers
(he also enjoys playing football and basketball). Daniel is in the
third generation of his family to be born in Boyle Heights.
RAUL HERRERA is from the Hollywood area and was eighteen
when the project began. He graduated from Hollywood High School
where he first studied photography. Now attending Los Angeles City
College, Raul is majoring in photography and journalism. His family
is originally from Mexico City.
SABRINA PASCHAL lives in the Hacienda Heights Projects in
Watts. She was fourteen years old and in the ninth grade at Markham
Jr. High at the time of the project. Sabrina is studying video at
the Watts Towers Arts Center, and her hobbies include basketball,
rollerblading, and swimming. She would like to be a pediatrician.
YOUNGHEE SEO lives in Hollywood but spends most of her time in Koreatown.
Eighteen years old while participating in Picture L.A., she recently
graduated from Fairfax High School. Her parents still live in Korea. Younghee
studied drawing in high school and plans to attend art school.
OSOFU WASHINGTON, lives in Inglewood. A student at Crenshaw
High School, he was sixteen when the Picture L.A. project began.
He is an avid basketball player and shares a love of music with
his family. He also enjoys computer graphics and hair styling, and
would like to open his own restaurant or barber shop.
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