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John Bankston
Amy Blakemore

Davis and Langlois
Tanya Batura
Margot Quan Knight
Mirror Mirror
Alexander Kroll
Jason Hirata
Amir Zaki
Ron Nagle
Akio Takamori
Danny Lyon
Mary Ann Peters
Luis Tomasello
Eric Elliott
Andrew Witkin
Jeffry Mitchell
Steve Davis
Introductions: David Huffman
Adam Sorensen
Francois Van Reenen
Beth Campbell
Claude Zervas
Stephanie Syjuco
Todd Simeone
Jason Teraoka
Vik Muniz

Scott Foldesi
Mark Mumford
Claire Cowie
Yunhee Min
Roy McMakin
Tania Kitchell
Richard Rezac
Carlos Vega
Eric Elliott
Squeak Carnwath
Maki Tamura

Margot Quan Knight
Gary Hill
Message In A Bottle
Adam Sorensen
Claire Cowie
Bing Wright
Roy McMakin
Katrina Moorhead
Claudette Schreuders
Marcelino Goncalves
room X room
Rashid Johnson
Scott Foldesi
Shaun O'Dell
Claude Zervas
Amir Zaki
Glenn Rudolph
Angela Fraleigh
Jeffry Mitchell
Steve Davis
Mary Ann Peters
Mark Mumford
Roy McMakin
Geoffrey Chadsey
Patrick Holderfield
Junctions
Todd Simeone
Claire Cowie
Laura Letinsky
Keith Tilford
Mary Ann Peters
Jeffry Mitchell
Richard Rezac
Stephanie Syjuco
Claude Zervas
Squeak Carnwath
Marcelino Gonçalves
Peter Schuyff
Tom Baldwin
Tania Kitchell
Jeffry Mitchell

Shaun O'Dell

Mark Mumford

Efrain Almeida

Keith Tilford
Glenn Rudolph
Claire Cowie
Patrick Holderfield

Ramona Trent
Roy McMakin
Yunhee Min

Claude Zervas

Casey Keeler

Henry Turmon
Lisa Liedgren
Laurie Reid
Amir Zaki
Adam Ross
Richard Rezac
Geoffrey Chadsey
Claire Cowie
Michelle Fierro



Amir Zaki
January 7 - February 20, 2010


 

Untitled (tower 30), 2009 Archival Pigment Print, Ed. of 2, 60" x 75"

 

 

 

James Harris Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of new work by Amir Zaki.  The artist has been working as a photographer for more than fifteen years, showing work from New York to Los Angeles to Seattle. This is his fourth solo exhibit at James Harris Gallery. For this exhibition, Zaki shows a series of color-saturated lifeguard towers that have been digitally manipulated to render them more iconic than real.

Three years ago the artist moved from Los Angeles to Orange County, California, prompting a noted shift in his work. Earlier projects captured the pools and mansions common to the Southern California landscape, documenting both the luxury and the cliché embedded in that region’s distinct architecture. Zaki brought a cool eye to these subjects, spying curvy swimming pools from above, and depicting retro-chic living rooms empty of inhabitants. Domestic scenes were rendered as near abstractions, both highlighting their subject’s power over our imagination, and seemingly trying to capture common scenes with an objective approach.

Zaki’s new work explores structures common to his new locale: lifeguard towers and the Volkswagen Vanagon. The beach-side architectural structures seem to float in the sky, as all access to the towers has been digitally erased. Colors in both the skies and the small buildings themselves have been intensified, adding to sense of the fantastic. Several structures read like military outlooks, all streamlined angularity, while others would not seem out of place at nearby Disneyland. The image of the Vanagon presents this beach mobile as both an emblem of 1960s hippiedom, as well as a smooth-edged visual sculpture. On a biographical note, the two vans represent the vehicle Zaki owned as a younger man, and the replacement he sought out more than a decade later. The two mirrored images look at each other nose to nose, perhaps a portrait of youth staring age in the eye.

Museum collections include the Whitney Museum of American Art (NYC), Henry Art Gallery (Seattle), New Museum of Contemporary Art (NYC), and the Madison Museum in Wisconsin. Zaki’s work is part of Los Angeles’ Creative Artists Agency, the Dacra Collection in Miami Beach, and corporate collections at Microsoft, the Progressive Corporation (Mayfield Village, Ohio), and Altoids Curiously Strong Collection (NYC).

 

 

 

 

 

 


VW Vanagon Dawn Dusk, Dusk Dawn, 2009

Epson Ultrachrome Archival Photograph

Edition of 3

56" x 96"

 

 

 

 

 

Untitlled (tower 6), 2009
Archival pigment print Edition of 2
20" x 25"

Untitlled (tower 9), 2009
Archival pigment print Edition of 2
20" x 25""


Untitlled (tower 18), 2009
Archival pigment print Edition of 2
20" x 25""


Untitlled (tower 19), 2009
Archival pigment print Edition of 2
20" x 25""

 

 

Untitlled (tower 38), 2009
Archival pigment print Edition of 2
20" x 25""


Untitlled (tower 42), 2009
Archival pigment print Edition of 2
60" x75""

Untitlled (tower 43), 2009
Archival pigment print Edition of 2
20" x 25""