Arts & Culture

Artists Marc Valesella & Michael Light Exhibit at Craig Krull Gallery

Cash for your car

Craig Krull Gallery is presenting two must-see photo-based exhibitions that investigate our relationship with the inhabited, arid American West.  Marc Valesella: Not Negotiable and Michael Light: InterMountain will open on April 24th, 2010 and continue through May 29th, 2010.  These visually striking exhibitions consider our impact on the extended ecosystem of the West in terms of development, resource extraction, environmental changes and related issues.

Marc Valesella's Not Negotiable documents the aftermath of Southern California wildfires.

Environmental Art

In conjunction with the Michael Light exhibition, the gallery will present a series of photographs by French born artist Marc Valesella entitled Not Negotiable.  The title refers to a statement made by then President George H.W. Bush during a 1992 Earth Summit.  When asked why he was resistant to making changes that could help the environment, the President replied that the American way of life is “not negotiable.” Valesella’s black and white 20×24” photographs, made with an 8×10” camera, document dark and desolate landscapes of Southern California that have been ravaged by wildfires in an era of repeated annual droughts and some of most devastating fires on record. The photographs daringly pose the question, “How much longer can we continue being not negotiable before we have nothing left to negotiate with…?”

Birds Eye View

In his previous exhibition at Craig Krull Gallery, Light presented images of the vast grid of Los Angeles at night.  His new work moves east from California towards Utah, Arizona, Idaho, Wyoming and Colorado.  Light continues his clear-eyed examination of the way we inhabit and alter our surroundings through a 4×5” aerial view camera from his self-piloted light aircraft or rented helicopters.  His perspective addresses what critic Stephen Vincent calls “the mythology and consequences of American westward expansion.”

 

Michael Light, Barney’s Canyon Gold Mine, Near Bingham Canyon, UT

19th Century-like Photo Books

In fact, the mammoth hand-made photo books that Light creates (measuring 36×44” when opened) are a response to the efforts of 19th century photographers such as Timothy O’Sullivan, who created volumes of photographs for government sponsored geological surveys that were intended to identify resources and attract settlement.  The photographs in this exhibit range from images of the world’s largest excavation at the Bingham Copper Mine near Salt Lake City, to the wholesale transformation of Wyoming’s Green and Powder River Basins by relentless natural gas and coal extraction, to the architectures of economic stratification in Phoenix.

Artist Talk at Archer School for Girls

The exhibit will also include two of Light’s most recent photo books, one in color focusing on the Snake River and Twin Falls, Idaho and the other a black and white journey above snow blanketed environs of Denver.   A component of the exhibition will be on view concurrently at The Gallery at The Archer School for Girls (11725 Sunset Blvd. L.A.).  A reception for Michael Light will take place at Craig Krull Gallery on Saturday April 24th from 3-5pm.  The reception at the Archer School for Girls will be held the same afternoon from 4-5:30 with an artist talk to follow at 5:30. (Reservations for the talk can be made by calling 310/873-7043.)

Bergamot Station
2525 Michigan Avenue, Building B-3
Santa Monica, California 90404
Tel: (310) 828-6410
www.craigkrullgallery.com

www.marcvalesella.com

www.michaellight.net

About the author

Lanee Neil