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The MOCA Downtown Los Angeles location is home to almost 5,000 artworks created since 1940, including masterpieces by classic contemporary artists, and inspiring new works by emerging and mid-career artists from Southern California and around the world. The MOCA is the only museum in Los Angeles devoted exclusively to contemporary art.
The Los Angeles Center for Photographic Studies was founded in 1974 by seven photographers, [1] "to encourage the growth and appreciation of photography and to provide an infrastructure for study and exhibition". [2] Initially LACPS did not have a public space of its own.
Anthony Hernandez (born 1947) is an American photographer who divides his time between Los Angeles, his birthplace, and Idaho. His photography has ranged from street photography to images of the built environment and other remains of civilization, particularly those discarded or abandoned elements that serve as evidence of human presence.
The Annenberg Space for Photography (2009 - 2020) was an exhibition space in the Century City neighborhood of Los Angeles' Westside.Founded in March 2009, it was dedicated to displaying photographic works, ranging from artistic to journalistic, using both traditional photographic prints and modern digital techniques.
The L.A.-based artist Adam Davis is touring his "Black Magic" show around the U.S. in his pursuit to make 20,000 tintype portraits of Black Americans.
Image credits: Detroit Photograph Company "There was a two-color process invented around 1913 by Kodak that used two glass plates in contact with each other, one being red-orange and the other ...
Philip Perkis (born 1935) is an American photographer and educator. He has received a Guggenheim Fellowship [1] and his work is held in the collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, [2] Carnegie Museum of Art, [3] J. Paul Getty Museum, [4] Metropolitan Museum of Art, [5] Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, [6] and Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
Anthony Friedkin (born 1949) is an American photographer whose works have chronicled California's landscapes, cities and people. [1] His topics include phenomena such as surf culture, prisons, cinema, and gay culture. [2] Friedkin’s photographs have been exhibited in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art [3] and the J. Paul Getty Museum.