James Welling
Untitled
1976
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James Welling
Untitled
1976
Physical Qualities
Gelatin silver print, Sheet: 132 x 105 mm. (5 3/16 x 4 1/8 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of the Artist
Object Number
2001.381
In the mid to late 1970s, just before nightfall, James Welling took to the streets of Los Angeles with a wooden view camera. The result was a series of photographs that recorded the changing light on the exteriors of buildings in the beachside neighborhoods of Venice and Santa Monica. In Welling’s photographs, identifiable locations are secondary to his interest in the ability of light to define surface and spatial relationships. Although the photographer provides recognizable glimpses of corners, doors, windows, and stairways, his primary subject is how twilight and darkness determine the way these features are experienced. Welling’s study of the effects of light, an element at the heart of the medium of photography, has continued throughout his career as exemplified in the exploration of the texture of aluminum foil presented in the lower right corner of this grouping.
James Welling, Los Angeles
Seeing Now: Photography Since 1960
Welling, James, 'Los Angeles Photographs 1976-1978,' October vol. 91, Winter 2000, portfolio section, pp. 81-100.
See artist file for complete bibliography. Wexner Center for the Arts, James Welling: Photographs 1974-1999, essay by Michael Fried, c. 2000 Wexner Center for the Arts.
Inscribed: upper left verso in graphite: "P2000/Kodak Azo"; lower left verso in graphite: "JW"; lower right verso in graphite: "1977"
