American,
b. 1949
Stray Dog #4
1990-1992
Gelatin silver print
30.875 x 26.625 x 1.625 in.
Gift of the Kathryn C. Wanlass Foundation
2010.43.4
John Divola published his Four Landscapes portfolio in 1992, which contained Stray Dogs and three other thematic sets of pictures. Each set featured photographs of a relatively small, centrally positioned subject within some aspect of the California landscape: a lone dog on city streets; a boat far off the Pacific coast; an isolated house in the desert; tourists exploring Yosemite National Park. The scenes, as Divola has described them, reflect our yearning to connect with nature, to escape culture. Like a stray dog, we wander, though “the line we desire to cross is always beyond our reach.”
A native of Los Angeles, Divola has engaged for more than four decades with photography as a conceptual enterprise, a means of examining metaphor, perception, and misperception. He is intrigued by the artifice that permeates contemporary life and, like many of his generation, by the contradictions inherent in the photographic medium, the camera’s ability to record, distort, confuse, amuse, propose, and deny. The scenarios he shoots are often staged to play up these contradictions.
In Zuma, a landmark series from the late 1970s, he shot (in color) achingly beautiful sunsets and sunrises framed by the windows of a decaying, abandoned beach house whose walls he had spray-painted with anxious patterns. These photographs are records of Divola’s own performative actions upon a stage partially found and partially fabricated, images of both violation and affirmation. In As Far as I Could Get, a later body of work conducted with signature wryness, Divola photographed himself running away from his tripod-mounted camera, down a desert road, through a field, and up an alley. Each picture chronicled avid participation as well as de ant retreat, exploring a tension, found in Stray Dogs and even further back, between belonging and apartness, between acceptance and interrogating the terms of what is.
Leah Ollman
Keywords
Click a term to view the records with the same keyword
This object has the following keywords:
car,
chain link fences*,
cityscapes*,
deciduous trees*,
Feral dogs,
graffiti*,
houses*,
Los Angeles,
sidewalk,
streets,
telephone poles*
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car
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chain link fences
- Fences made of heavy steel wire which is interwoven in such a way as to provide a continuous mesh without ties or knots, except at the ends.
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cityscapes
- Refers to creative works that depict settlements that may be considered cities, which are large or important communities with population, status, and internal complexity greater than most towns in the region. For creative works depicting towns, use "townscapes (representations)."
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deciduous trees
- Trees which seasonally shed leaves.
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Feral dogs
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graffiti
- Casual scribbles or informal drawings on walls or other surfaces. Examples include the following: The casual scribbles or pictographs on walls, stones, or other surfaces in ancient and medieval times, the marks incised or cut into the underside of ancient Greek vases and other ceramics, and modern humorous, satiric, obscene, or gang-related writings or drawings executed anonymously in public places. For more finished, elaborate works on modern walls and other surfaces, prefer "graffiti art." Graffiti is not the works created by "sgraffito," in that sgraffito is not casual, but is instead a formal decorative mark-making technique used on pottery, glass, or other surfaces.
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houses
- Individual dwellings designed to be occupied by a single tenant or family. May also refer to a building for human occupation, for some purpose other than that of an ordinary dwelling; with this usage, "house" is generally prefaced (e.g., "cowhouse," "almshouse").
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Los Angeles
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sidewalk
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streets
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telephone poles
- Utility poles used primarily to support telephone lines or cables.
Exhibition List
This object was included in the following exhibitions:
Also found in
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