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In LA’s vibrant highway vista, Karen T. Yamashita's Manzanar Murakami finds his orchestra. Take away the SoCal sunshine, and the freeway pulses on – two strands of ribbon joining where a cluster of high rises emerges. Drawing the viewer's up upward, the photograph itself seems to be quivering, evoking the sense of movement and rhythm Murakami taps into in composing his symphony. Reinforcing the imagery of “Station D: Jefferson and Normandie,” the iconic palm trees become wispy silhouettes, the fronds forming dark patches that obscure what lies beneath – the “everything going on down under [them]…the poor and crazy ugly or beautiful, honest or shameful” (33).
Comprising part of a series of photos of Los Angeles taken c. 1975 to 2005, this photo evinces a lack of retouching and seems to have been taken from an objective standpoint. Therefore, we can classify it as non-fiction, corresponding to the editorial genre or perhaps that of the personal in relation to contributor Allan L. Hill. The various forms light takes in the photo – from the two highways glowing white and red, the scattered twinkling lights, and the greenish glow from the parking structure in the foreground – evoke LA as the land of Hollywood stars, a city abuzz with glitz and glitter.
By Samantha Ching
Yamashita, Karen T. Tropic of Orange. Coffee House, 1997. Print
Posted on 17 March 2014, 11:02 am by Samantha Ching | Permalink
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Discussion of "Los Angeles"
City Lights in a Highway Heartbeat
In LA’s vibrant highway vista, Karen T. Yamashita's Manzanar Murakami finds his orchestra. Take away the SoCal sunshine, and the freeway pulses on – two strands of ribbon joining where a cluster of high rises emerges. Drawing the viewer's up upward, the photograph itself seems to be quivering, evoking the sense of movement and rhythm Murakami taps into in composing his symphony. Reinforcing the imagery of “Station D: Jefferson and Normandie,” the iconic palm trees become wispy silhouettes, the fronds forming dark patches that obscure what lies beneath – the “everything going on down under [them]…the poor and crazy ugly or beautiful, honest or shameful” (33).Comprising part of a series of photos of Los Angeles taken c. 1975 to 2005, this photo evinces a lack of retouching and seems to have been taken from an objective standpoint. Therefore, we can classify it as non-fiction, corresponding to the editorial genre or perhaps that of the personal in relation to contributor Allan L. Hill. The various forms light takes in the photo – from the two highways glowing white and red, the scattered twinkling lights, and the greenish glow from the parking structure in the foreground – evoke LA as the land of Hollywood stars, a city abuzz with glitz and glitter.
Posted on 17 March 2014, 11:02 am by Samantha Ching | Permalink
Add your voice to this discussion.
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