ISBN: PB: 9780892366163

Getty Publications

March 2006

344 pp.

25,5x17,8 cm

24 colour illus., 100 black&white illus.

PB:
£45.00
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Categories:

Looking for Los Angeles

Architecture, Film, Photography and the Urban Landscape

Often referred to as the city of the future, Los Angeles is known for its sprawl, its constant change, and its special relationship to the film industry. The twelve contributors to "Looking for Los Angeles" focus on dramatic shifts in the urban landscape, important moments in the city's architectural history, and the role of the image in this mecca of image makers. Dutch writer Cees Nooteboom searches for Los Angeles's center and finds a city that "breaks itself down, builds itself up again, displaces and regroups itself" and where "freedom of movement" is a basic premise of life. Historian Philip Ethington documents the city's changing character in both text and images, urban studies professor Dana Cuff exposes the demise of once-thriving urban neighborhoods to make way for Modernist housing projects, and anthropologist Susan A. Phillips invites us on a personal journey into "the projects" to meet gang members and their families today. Artist Robbert Flick offers a sixteen-page, full-color photo-essay that takes us on a "drive-by" along Alameda Avenue, architectural historian Thomas S. Hines traces Frank Lloyd Wright's influence on the life and career of photographer Edmund Teske, and film historian Robert L. Carringer examines Los Angeles as a setting for Hollywood feature films.

About the author

Charles G. Salas is head of the Research and Education Department at the Getty Research Institute.

Michael S. Roth is president of the California College of Arts and Crafts in Berkeley.

They are co-editors of Disturbing Remains, Getty Research Institute, 2001.