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Randi Malkin Steinberger: No Circus
Randi Malkin Steinberger
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Description for Randi Malkin Steinberger: No Circus
Hardcover. Num Pages: 126 pages, 69. BIC Classification: 1KBB; AJB; AJC. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 188 x 237 x 17. Weight in Grams: 656.
No Circus brings together photographs by Los Angeles-based Randi Malkin Steinberger (born 1960) of buildings tented for termite fumigation around Los Angeles. After moving to the city in the early '90s, she encountered these shrouded structures and began to stop and photograph them, knowing that the tent might be undraped at any given moment. Steinberger was intrigued by the way the colors and shapes of the tents showed off the forms below and highlighted the beauty of the poor plants on the outside, still flourishing, unaware that they were slowly being poisoned. Beyond the intended purpose of fumigation, these tents unwittingly allow us to stop and contemplate not only architectural form and the meaning of home, but also the Southern California lifestyle more broadly.
Product Details
Publisher
Damiani
Format
Hardback
Publication date
2016
Condition
New
Weight
656g
Number of Pages
126
Place of Publication
Bologna, Italy
ISBN
9788862084802
SKU
V9788862084802
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15
About Randi Malkin Steinberger
Randi Malkin Steinberger is an American photographer and documentary filmmaker whose work has been shown worldwide. Malkin Steinberger's experience as a photographer and filmmaker was shaped by her studies in Italy, where she lived for ten years while launching a photography school and gallery. She has produced artists' books that are now part of the permanent collections of New York's Museum of Modern Art and The Whitney Museum of American Art, and The Art Institute and Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago. Malkin Steinberger's documentary films include Holidays, which was shot in Jerusalem, Florence, and Las Vegas and aired on the Sundance Channel. She is represented by Sears Peyton Gallery in New York and Los Angeles. Malkin Steinberger resides in Los Angeles.
Reviews for Randi Malkin Steinberger: No Circus
Everyone has looked twice at these big top monoliths but only Steinberger has looked again and again, transforming termite tents in to public art with her gorgeous and obsessive eye.
Miranda July The photographer Randi Malkin Steinberger captured the incongruously cheerful fumigation tents that cover buildings being treated for termites in Los Angeles.
Mike McPhate The New York Times [A] Ruschaean portrait of the particular strangeness of Los Angeles and its suburbs... The images fit snugly in the tradition of looking at the sun-stroked Southern California landscape as an alien terrain, the same surreal sweep that Bruce Davidson encountered when he shot palm trees growing in airport parking lots.
Max Lakin T: The New York Times Style Magazine At once material and imagined, fantastic and ordinary, Malkin Steinberger's No Circus opens the door to a world which is absurd in its anxiety, delightful in its dissolution, and, perhaps, already just next door.
Sasha Patkin New York Photography Diary Steinberger's photographs capture both the playfulness and underlying unsettling feelings of these structures. Stripes of all color combinations fill the pages of her publication, the tangerine oranges, bumblebee yellows, and candy reds starkly sticking out against the greenery and flora of California.
Claire Voon Hyperallergic What may have appeared to be the first signs of some cheerfully unhinged suburban dystopia, in fact, had a much more practical explanation: the tents were covering houses being fumigated. They are a familiar sight for Angelenos, Steinberger soon found, and over the course of a decade she came across hundreds of them driving around the city. In her new book, No Circus, she collects over 60 photographs capturing the houses temporarily shrouded in colorful tarpaulin.
Meg Miller Fast Company
Miranda July The photographer Randi Malkin Steinberger captured the incongruously cheerful fumigation tents that cover buildings being treated for termites in Los Angeles.
Mike McPhate The New York Times [A] Ruschaean portrait of the particular strangeness of Los Angeles and its suburbs... The images fit snugly in the tradition of looking at the sun-stroked Southern California landscape as an alien terrain, the same surreal sweep that Bruce Davidson encountered when he shot palm trees growing in airport parking lots.
Max Lakin T: The New York Times Style Magazine At once material and imagined, fantastic and ordinary, Malkin Steinberger's No Circus opens the door to a world which is absurd in its anxiety, delightful in its dissolution, and, perhaps, already just next door.
Sasha Patkin New York Photography Diary Steinberger's photographs capture both the playfulness and underlying unsettling feelings of these structures. Stripes of all color combinations fill the pages of her publication, the tangerine oranges, bumblebee yellows, and candy reds starkly sticking out against the greenery and flora of California.
Claire Voon Hyperallergic What may have appeared to be the first signs of some cheerfully unhinged suburban dystopia, in fact, had a much more practical explanation: the tents were covering houses being fumigated. They are a familiar sight for Angelenos, Steinberger soon found, and over the course of a decade she came across hundreds of them driving around the city. In her new book, No Circus, she collects over 60 photographs capturing the houses temporarily shrouded in colorful tarpaulin.
Meg Miller Fast Company