Sky Bergman
The Artist’s Gallery is a co-operative gallery located amidst a cluster of galleries in Bergamot Station, in Santa Monica, CA. It’s a mixed media gallery that once a year hosts a juried exhibition, open to artists and photographers from around the country. This year, the exhibition was jurored by Karen Moss, the Deputy Director of Exhibitions and Programs at the Orange County Museum of Art, and the amount of photography selected was at an all time high. The exhibition opens on Saturday, August 17th and runs through September 3rd, 2010.
Some of the photographic highlights of the California Open are images by California photographer, Sky Bergman, of Japanese commuters. The first four below are in the exhibition, and additional images are from her site.
I became fascinated by the interaction of the people on the Japanese subway system. There are few places in the world where one’s income, marital status, race, and interests bare no consequence to the person sitting next to them. One exception, however, is of those individuals on a subway. The Japanese people have created a society that heavily relies on public transportation as opposed to being a culture of cars. Social rank is not implied by your means of transportation. The young, the old, the rich, and the poor, sit next to each other, share each other’s space, and occasionally glimpse into each other’s lives.
In this series I am captivated by the seemingly silent clash of culture within the Japanese society that is evident when riding the subway.
I am excited to see the selections of the juror, as I recently visited the OCMA to view the exhibition, 15 Minutes Of Fame: Portraits From Ansel Adams To Andy Warhol. It was a terrific range of portraiture and is still on display until September 19th. The exhibition showcases more than 175 works (primarily from the museum’s significant collection of photography), including many that have never before been exhibited. 15 Minutes of Fame: Portraits from Ansel Adams to Andy Warhol explores a diverse range of photographic portraits from early modernism, to photographs of celebrities from the 1930s to 1960s, photojournalistic street photography from the 1960s, and contemporary portraiture.
Posts on Lenscratch may not be reproduced without the permission of the Lenscratch staff and the photographer.
Recommended
-
Smith Galtney in Conversation with Douglas BreaultDecember 3rd, 2024
-
Jordan Eagles in Conversation with Douglas BreaultDecember 2nd, 2024
-
Michael Rababy: CASINOLAND: Tired of WinningNovember 29th, 2024
-
Interview with Tabitha Barnard and Jake Benzinger: “Dead Trees Speak to Me” and Independent Photo Book PublishingNovember 21st, 2024