LOS ANGELES, CA.- In Focus: Making a Scene presents more than thirty tableaux, or staged photographs, from the
J. Paul Getty Museums world-renowned photography collection, on view at the Getty Center from June 30October 18, 2009. Ranging from early daguerreotypes to contemporary color compositions, the exhibition highlights creative works by both recognized and lesser-known masters. Among the artists included are Julia Margaret Cameron, Lewis Carroll, Eileen Cowin, Man Ray, Ralph Eugene Meatyard, Guido Rey, Henry Peach Robinson, and Lucas Samaras.
We associate photography with fact, said Erin Garcia, assistant curator, Department of Photographs, the J. Paul Getty Museum, and curator of the exhibition. From the very beginning, photography has been a medium for fiction. With this In Focus exhibition, we want to showcase images that are unconcerned with portraying the world as it exists, but instead tell stories and embrace theatricality. Some of the photographs take on serious subjects like religion or literature, but others are playful, iconoclastic, and experimental.
Among the nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century selections are tableaux vivants, or living pictures, such as Guido Reys The Letter and Lewis Carrolls Saint George and the Dragon, inspired by the popular Victorian pastime of dressing up and posing to resemble famous works of art or literary scenes. Mid-twentieth-century examples of Pictorialism and Surrealismwith their respective efforts to imitate painting and to explore the subconsciousdemonstrate photographys ability to picture imaginary subjects. For instance, in Ralph Eugene Meatyards photograph of his sons at an abandoned building, uncanny details suggest supernatural phenomena. The most contemporary selections use artifice as a method of examining mainstream media and the nature of representation. This is evident in Eileen Cowins series of Family Docudramas, which draw equal inspiration from family snapshots and soap operas.
The exhibition is arranged chronologically and includes daguerreotypes, salt prints, albumen prints, platinum prints, bromoil prints, gelatin silver prints, Polaroids, and chromogenic prints.
This will be the fifth installation of the ongoing In Focus series of exhibitions, which present photographs from the Gettys permanent collection thematically. Previous exhibitions have included The Nude, The Landscape, and most recently, The Portrait.
Upcoming In Focus shows include In Focus: The Worker, opening in November 2009, which will present a chronological survey of photographs depicting people and their occupations across a variety of cultures.
In September 2009, the Getty Museum also will present Irving Penn: Small Trades, an exhibition designed to highlight the Gettys 2008 acquisition of Penns seminal body of work entitled The Small Trades, which consists of several hundred full-length portraits of tradespeople.