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Anthony Hernandez Screened Pictures #19, 2017/2018

Anthony Hernandez
Screened Pictures #19, 2017/2018
Inkjet print
54 1/2 x 54 1/2 inches
138.4 x 138.4 cm

Anthony Hernandez Screened Pictures #27, 2017/2018

Anthony Hernandez
Screened Pictures #27, 2017/2018
Inkjet print
44 1/2 x 44 1/2 inches
113 x 113 cm

Anthony Hernandez Screened Pictures #3, 2017/2018

Anthony Hernandez
Screened Pictures #3, 2017/2018
Inkjet print
44 1/2 x 44 1/2 inches
113 x 113 cm

Press Release

Kayne Griffin Corcoran is pleased to present Screened Pictures, an exhibition of a new body of work by Anthony Hernandez to be shown together for the first time. This will be the first exhibition of the artist with the gallery and his first solo exhibition in his hometown of Los Angeles in over a decade.

Screened Pictures consists of portraits of Los Angeles as seen through the metal mesh of the various different bus stops throughout the city. The scenes are abstracted and offer a different perspective of the city than his earlier works—giving off a digital appearance even though they are all taken on film and have not been digitally manipulated. Screened Pictures brings forth a shift back to figures in Hernandez’s photographs as well. Different from his earlier series, his figures are now blurred through the inherent abstraction of the metal grating and his choice to focus the camera consistently on the metal mesh rather than the background. Upon closer examination of the photographs, visual cues inform the viewer as to what they could be looking at: a tent perched on the edge of a patch of grass, a lone figure walking in front of a gas station, and various different architectural details from throughout the city. All of these bring to mind certain aspects of Hernandez’s other series, yet this revisitation is from a completely different perspective. “LA is my big studio,” Hernandez has said. “One day I’m in one corner, the next in the middle…it’s like having a filter to see LA in a new way.”

Anthony Hernandez first began photographing in 1966 with a 35mm camera. His early works consisted of black and white street photography that were solemn and pensive. After receiving a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, Hernandez purchased a large-format camera and began photographing urban landscapes and public spaces. He then made his first color work, Rodeo Drive (1984) photographing shoppers with a 35mm camera on the famed street in Beverly Hills for which the series is named. His later series would differ greatly as he shifted away from photographing figures that were central to the image itself, rather focusing on the spaces that they inhabited and the scenes that followed. Within each body of work Hernandez acknowledges the implied cultural differences of class and race that is inherent to the city.

Hernandez’s subject matter is born out of Los Angeles itself—a documentation of the common places that are accessible to all but also seldom used. Los Angeles is a city of erasure and through his photographs Hernandez is able to capture a persistent feeling of loss. His pictures are often devoid of figural representation yet rampant with their lingering presence. The minimal and mindful framing of each image made Hernandez’s photographs “as charged as tarot cards,” according to critic Luc Sante. His photographing of public transit areas is one that he has returned to often, first in his series Public Use Areas (1980) and now again in Screened Pictures (2017/2018).

Anthony Hernandez (b. 1947) lives and works in Los Angeles, CA and Idaho. He was most recently included in May You Live in Interesting Times curated by Ralph Rugoff as part of the 58th International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia and is subject to a solo-exhibition at the Nelson-Atkins Museum, Kansas City, MO. Hernandez was subject to his first career retrospective that traveled to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (2016), the Milwaukee Art Museum, WI (2017), and the Fundación MAPRE in Madrid, Spain (2019). In 1998 Hernandez was awarded the Rome Prize, and in 2018 he received the Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship. His work resides in permanent collections such as the Getty Center, the Hammer Museum, LACMA, and the Museum of Contemporary Art (all Los Angeles); the Met, Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney, and the Guggenheim Museum (all New York); the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and the Tate Modern in London, amongst others.