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Ed Ruscha
Parking Lots
完整圖錄內容
Pershing Square underground lot, 5th and Hill (E. 279); Lockheed Air Terminal, 2627 N. Hollywood Way, Burbank (E. 280); Lockheed Air Terminal, 2627 N. Hollywood Way, Burbank (E. 281); Hollywood Bowl, 2301 N. Highland (E. 282); 5000 W. Carling Way (E. 283); Eileen Feather Salon, 14425 Sherman Way, Nan Nuys (E. 284); May Company, 6150 Laurel Canyon, North Hollywood (E. 285); 7133 Kester, Van Nuys (E. 286); Good Year Tires, 6610 Laurel Canyon, North Hollywood (E. 287); Unidentified Lot, Reseda (E. 288); Sears, Roebuck & Co., Bellingham & Hamlin, North Hollywood (E. 289); Rocketdyne, Canoga Park (E. 290); Dodgers Stadium, 1000 Elysian Park Ave. (291); State Dept. of Employment, 14400 Sherman Way, Van Nuys (E. 292); Zurich-American Insurance, 4465 Wilshire Blvd. (E. 293); Gilmore Drive-In Theatre, 6201 W. 3rd St. (E. 294); Litton Industries, 5500 Canoga, Woodland Hills (E. 295); Universal Studios, Universal City (E. 296); State Board of Equalization, 14601 Sherman Way, Van Nuys (E. 297); 7101 Sepulveda Blvd., Van Nuys (E. 298); Church of Christ, 14655 Sherman Way, Van Nuys (E. 299); Century City, 1800 Avenue of the Stars (E. 300); Century City, 1800 Avenue of the Stars (E. 301); Fashion Square, Sherman Oaks (E. 302); May Company, 6067 Wilshire Blvd. (E. 303); Pierce College, Woodland Hills (E. 304); Pierce College, Woodland Hills (E. 305); 5600-5700 Blocks of Wilshire Blvd. (E. 306); Federal, County & Police Building Lots; Van Nuys, California (E. 307); and Intersections of Wilshire Blvd. and Santa Monica Blvds. (E. 308)
Ed Ruscha
American | 1937Quintessentially American, Ed Ruscha is an L.A.-based artist whose art, like California itself, is both geographically rooted and a metaphor for an American state of mind. Ruscha is a deft creator of photography, film, painting, drawing, prints and artist books, whose works are simultaneously unexpected and familiar, both ironic and sincere.
His most iconic works are at turns poetic and deadpan, epigrammatic text with nods to advertising copy, juxtaposed with imagery that is either cinematic and sublime or seemingly wry documentary. Whether the subject is his iconic Standard Gas Station or the Hollywood Sign, a parking lot or highway, his works are a distillation of American idealism, echoing the expansive Western landscape and optimism unique to postwar America.