Delve into the postwar Los Angeles art world in this online archive, which provides additional material related to the exhibitions on view at the Getty Center. Learn about hipsters and happenings, and the venues across the city where all the action took place through images from the archives and first-hand accounts with the artists.
In the 1960s, Robert Graham produced numerous small-scale dioramas, encased in plastic and containing an assortment of miniature forms. In several of them, tiny plastic palm fronds, sand, and naked wax figurines complete with tan lines invoke the age-old California clichés of sun, sea, and sex. The contents of others, such as this work, invoke different associations, including slapstick humor, consumerism, and the bold graphic imagery of Pop Art, which had come to prominence through a number of high profile Los Angeles exhibitions that decade. Graham’s minute banana invites particular comparison with the cover of Andy Warhol’s cover for the album The Velvet Underground & Nico, released the previous year. While its contents are undeniably Pop, the domed plastic enclosure, with its turquoise pool-like base, relates the work to the reflective surfaces and plastics produced by Graham’s Finish Fetish peers, as well as to the industrial forms of minimalism.
Explore the Era
Delve into the postwar Los Angeles art world in this online archive, which provides additional material related to the exhibitions on view at the Getty Center. Learn about hipsters and happenings, and the venues across the city where all the action took place through images from the archives and first-hand accounts with the artists.
Untitled
Untitled, 1967, Robert Graham. Polyurethane resin. 8 5/16 x 11 7/16 x 11 1/8 in. Collection of Ed Ruscha. © Estate of Robert Graham
On View at the Getty Center: Pacific Standard Time: Crosscurrents in L.A. Painting and Sculpture, 1950-1970
In the 1960s, Robert Graham produced numerous small-scale dioramas, encased in plastic and containing an assortment of miniature forms. In several of them, tiny plastic palm fronds, sand, and naked wax figurines complete with tan lines invoke the age-old California clichés of sun, sea, and sex. The contents of others, such as this work, invoke different associations, including slapstick humor, consumerism, and the bold graphic imagery of Pop Art, which had come to prominence through a number of high profile Los Angeles exhibitions that decade. Graham’s minute banana invites particular comparison with the cover of Andy Warhol’s cover for the album The Velvet Underground & Nico, released the previous year. While its contents are undeniably Pop, the domed plastic enclosure, with its turquoise pool-like base, relates the work to the reflective surfaces and plastics produced by Graham’s Finish Fetish peers, as well as to the industrial forms of minimalism.
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Video: Hans Neuendorf speaks about the work of Robert Graham, February 2011
Robert Graham looking at his wax sculptures in his exhibition at Nicholas Wilder Gallery, 1968. © Robert Graham. Image courtesy of Jerry McMillan and Craig Krull Gallery, Santa Monica. © Jerry McMillan
Robert Graham in the 1960s. Image courtesy of the Robert Graham Estate
Robert Graham working on one of his boxes in the 1960s. Image courtesy of the Robert Graham Estate
Robert Graham working on one of his boxes in the 1960s. Image courtesy of the Robert Graham Estate