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Under Construction
Lewis Baltz, Rodrigo ValenzuelaAbout
We are proud to present the captivating historical images of Lewis Baltz’s Park City series alongside the work of contemporary artist Rodrigo Valenzuela, who explores issues of labor, alienation, and displacement.Throughout the 1970s, Lewis Baltz captured the changing landscape he observed throughout different parts of the American West. Kimball Art Center will present the captivating historical images of Lewis Baltz (1945-2014) from his celebrated Park City (1980) series, comprised of 102 photographs taken from 1978 to 1979 in a then-developing section of the city. This series has long been considered one of the central portfolios in Baltz’s groundbreaking career and highlights in documentary fashion the rapid building that was taking place during this Park City’s reinvention as a ski resort town.
Complementing these captivating historical images will be photographs and installations by contemporary artist Rodrigo Valenzuela (b. 1982, Chile) who, taking inspiration from Baltz‘s work, similarly captures our built landscape while also exploring issues of labor, alienation, and displacement. In his works American Type and Hedonic Reversal, Valenzuela directly responds to Baltz’s stark images of housing and commercial developments. Building three-dimensional assemblages with two-by-fours and other raw materials in his studio and then photographing them, Valenzuela highlights the labor inherent in constructing our cities and the undocumented labor force that is often relegated to the shadows in our society.
Contemporary artist Rodrigo Valenzuela (b. 1982, Chile) lives and works in Los Angeles, CA., where he is an Assistant Professor and Head of the Photography Department at UCLA. Valenzuela meditates on the built landscape more abstractly while often highlighting themes of labor, alienation, and displacement in his work. In his series, American-type (2018), he specifically responds to the content and aesthetic of Baltz’s work. Building quixotic architectural assemblages with two-by-fours and other raw construction materials and then photographing them, Valenzuela draws attention to the labor inherent in constructing our cities and the undocumented labor force that is often relegated to the shadows in our society.
Contemporary artist Rodrigo Valenzuela (b. 1982, Chile) lives and works in Los Angeles, CA., where he is an Assistant Professor and Head of the Photography Department at UCLA. Valenzuela meditates on the built landscape more abstractly while often highlighting themes of labor, alienation, and displacement in his work. In his series, American-type (2018), he specifically responds to the content and aesthetic of Baltz’s work. Building quixotic architectural assemblages with two-by-fours and other raw construction materials and then photographing them, Valenzuela draws attention to the labor inherent in constructing our cities and the undocumented labor force that is often relegated to the shadows in our society.
Lewis Baltz lived and worked in California for the core period of his career. Baltz attended graduate school at Claremont College during a period when “Light and Space” artists such as Larry Bell were teaching. The minimalist style of his mentors is certainly apparent in Baltz’s working methods. Between the mid-1960s and the late 1980s, Baltz created an ambitious body of work primarily consisting of film-like portfolios.
Throughout the 1970s, Lewis Baltz (1945-2014) captured the changing landscape he observed across the American West, with Park City, Utah notably becoming one of his subjects. Under Construction features this important work, composed of 102 images taken in 1978 and 1979 in the then rapidly developing area of Prospector Park. Park City has long been considered one of the central portfolios in Baltz’s groundbreaking career and highlights in documentary fashion the dramatic change that was taking place during this city’s reinvention as a ski resort.