This foreshadows the mission of the greater oeuvre, and renders each chapter (there will be four) more potent and contextual. This is the American condition and the country we share: “A common aspect of the experience of poverty in America, Eich’s two books suggest, is the role of family and community as sources of hope.”
Read moreReview: Matt Eich in Photograph Magazine
As a storyteller, Eich has tight command of setting, character, and composition, and openness otherwise, as to how these lives in this particular place play out. His work is earnest and avoids any kind of sociological overdetermination. If Eich has an agenda, it’s an irrefutable one – to gently stretch our capacity for empathy. - Leah Ollman
Read moreLets Talk Soon: "Access to Excess" at Photo LA
A discussion centered around the internet & the art market and its impact on patterns of collecting.
Photo LA Programming | Panel Discussion
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2019 | 2PM
One Last Look: 2018 in Review
Our Artists had a banner year: Ian van Coller was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for his ongoing work Naturalists of the Long Now, Matt Eich released the second volume of The Invisible Yoke: Sin & Salvation in Baptist Town, Jennifer Greenburg exhibited Revising History in Italy, and Paul Turounet’s Estamos Buscando A was included in the 5th Transborder Biennale, which occurred simultaneously in El Paso Museum of Art (EPMA) and the Museo de Arte de Ciudad Juárez.
Read morejdc Fine Art in Keep the Channel Open
Director, Jennifer DeCarlo in conversation with Mike Sakasegawa for his evolving podcast, Keep the Channel Open. Listen to Episode 45.
