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Where We Live
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Where We Live
Photographs of America from the Berman Collection
Kenneth A. Breisch, Judith Keller, and Colin Westerbeck
With an essay by Bruce Wagner

J. Paul Getty Museum
192 pages, 11 1/4 x 11 inches
170 color illustrations
ISBN 978-0-89236-854-9
paper, Out of Print  
2006


 

Where We Live presents more than 150 images from the Bruce and Nancy Berman Collection of contemporary photographs. From Mitch Epstein's Holyoke, Massachusetts, to Camilo Vergara's Detroit, to John Divola's 29 Palms in Southern California, the images here concentrate on the American landscape and the people and structures that can be found in its vast vistas—and its backyards. The photographs that the Bermans have been drawn to often represent changing American communities recorded by artists whose vision is passionate but unsentimental—a vision that acknowledges the present as fleeting, desolate, and lyrical.

Beautifully reproduced in this volume—which coincides with an exhibition to be held at the J. Paul Getty Museum from October 24, 2006, to February 25, 2007—are works from twenty-four contemporary photographers, the majority working in color, from William Christenberry and William Eggleston to Doug Dubois and Sheron Rupp. Accompanying the photographs are illuminating essays by Kenneth A. Breisch and Colin Westerbeck and an introduction by Judith Keller. An essay by novelist Bruce Wagner captures the mood that runs through this powerful assemblage of photographs.

Kenneth A. Breisch is an adjunct associate professor in the School of Architecture at the University of Southern California. Judith Keller is curator of photographs at the J. Paul Getty Museum. Bruce Wagner is the author of I'm Losing You and Still Holding; his most recent novel is The Chrysanthemum Palace. A writer for the Los Angeles Times, Colin Westerbeck was previously curator of photography at the Art Institute of Chicago.

This title is out of print. Please look for it at your local libraries and/or used bookstores.