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Los Angeles Center for Digital Art (LACDA)

EVENT
Exhibition Detail
Beyond the Valley of the Micro-Bops
107 W. 5th St.
Los Angeles, CA 90013


March 13th, 2008 - April 5th, 2008
Opening: 
March 13th, 2008 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM
 
Beyond the Valley of the Micro-Bops,Richard EdsonRichard Edson,
Beyond the Valley of the Micro-Bops,
Mar. 13 - Apr. 5, 2008, Photography
> QUICK FACTS
WEBSITE:  
http://www.lacda.com/
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downtown/east la
EMAIL:  
lacda@lacda.com
PHONE:  
323 646 9427
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photographs
COST:  
Free
> DESCRIPTION

Beyond the Valley of the Micro-Bops
Photographs by Richard Edson

Mar. 13 - Apr. 5, 2008
Opening Reception Thursday, Mar. 13, 7-9 pm

Los Angeles Center For Digital Art
107 West Fifth Street
Los Angeles, CA 90013

Online press release with images: http://leejosephpublicity.com/show/richardedson
Gallery website: http://lacda.com/

For more information, contact Lee Joseph Publicity:
http://leejosephpublicity.com/
359 E. Magnolia, Suite F.
Burbank, CA 91502
leejemail@gmail.com
p (818) 848-2698
f (818) 848-2699

Richard Edson's toy figures are meticulously shot at an intensely close range under very specialized lighting conditions to emphasize their shape, color, "toyness" and their relationship to a monochromatic or multi-chromatic background. Since the figures are so small and shot with a macro lens (with an elaborate series of tube expanders) the focal plane is extremely narrow, allowing only a tight area where part of the figure is in focus. This creates an odd and not unpleasant sense of space, displacement and fission. The effect brings the tiny objects into a larger than life existence, where dynamic worlds are elicited full of what the artist calls "dreams, visions, or solutions to problems not yet even imagined."

Looking at these simple figures as photographed through the macro lens one is impressed by their depth and humanity, and the more one looks the greater the illusion becomes. What were once crude postures and expressions "factory carved" in plastic are now repositories of secret emotion and (often humorous) feelings that surprise us with their mournful outstretched arms, plaintive gazes and sometimes fierce aggression. The contrast between the cartoon-like quality of the figurines and the seriousness of their respective "dramas" has to make one smile a little, and in this way the artist brings a welcome comic relief to the timeless human narratives he captures in these 'micro-iconic' images.

Richard Edson on the meaning behind this exhibit:
"When I looked at these simple figures through the macro lens I was impressed by the seeming depth and humanity. It didn't seem possible, but the more I looked the greater the illusion became. They seem like repositories of secret emotion and feelings. But then the more I thought about it the more sense it made. They were imagined and created and worked on by human beings and something remarkable and human was transferred."

Los Angeles Center For Digital Art is dedicated to the propagation of all forms of digital art, supporting local, international, emerging and established artists. Gallery hours are Wednesday - Saturday, 12 - 5PM.

 


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