727 S. Spring Street
Los Angeles, CA 90014
213.612.0276
info@drkrm.com
hours: wednesday-saturday 12-6 pm
sunday 12-4 pm and by appointment







 

Bubba and his Great-Uncle “Six-Pack” Sammy 1990

Merton and Meryl and their Dobermans 1990

Donny’s girl in the kitchen 1982


Eyeing a chainsaw that won’t start 1982


Ernie tinkering 1983


Liza and Uncle Kendall on the way to the swimming hole 1990
 

 


 




VACATIONLAND
Photographs by Steven Rubin

April 28 -May 26 2012
Reception for the Artist Saturday May 5th, 7-10pm

drkrm is pleased to present Vacationland, rural Maine chronicled in the photography of Steven Rubin, which will be on display from April 28 through May 26, 2012. There will be a reception for the Artist Saturday May 5th from 7 till 10 pm.

In 1982, with a camera but no car and little money, Steven Rubin hitchhiked around Maine, heading inland from the coast and finding his way to this remote region where the photographs in this exhibit were taken, living for a time in an abandoned cabin without electricity, heat, or running water.  When the winter proved too cold, he accepted a bare mattress in the corner of a family's mobile home.  He eventually became a fixture in the community and they embraced him, at least for a time.  Over the years he returned for numerous visits.

Maine’s Route One winds its way along a coastline graced by scenic vistas, picturesque fishing villages anchored by lobster shacks, seaside resorts and the vacation homes of millionaires. This is the Maine featured in tourist brochures and embedded in our collective vision of the state.  But there exists another Maine, a land of perennial poverty just beyond the interstate.  It is home to the people portrayed here.  Long term residents of the backwoods, they live in scattered dwellings whose distance from the coast is measured in more than miles.  Here they remain exiled from the American Dream and from the description on the state license plates which reads Vacationland.

"Rubin sought to avoid the stereotypes of people broken by their struggles or heroically pulling themselves up by their bootstraps. Influenced not only by legendary photographer Dorothea Lange but also anthropologist Clifford Geertz, Rubin aimed at creating a body of work that functioned as a "thick description," a finely detailed document for understanding the context of human actions. Achieving that goal required time." Tara Godvin--Time magazine

Click here to read Patricio Maya's essay on Vacationland, "Why do Hipsters Grow Mullets?"

This body of work is an homage to the strength of these families who must struggle on a daily basis to keep body and soul together.  The photographs are offered with gratitude and admiration to those who generously opened their doors and shared their lives with a flatlander. These black and white images record periods in the 1980s and 90s, with briefer visits extending into the 2000s.  The photographs depict life lived in a particular time and place, authentic and uncalculated.

Currently an Assistant Professor of Art at Penn State University, Steven Rubin worked for more than twenty years as a freelance photojournalist and documentary photographer. His photographs have been published domestictically in The New York Times Magazine, National Geographic, Time, Newsweek and The Village Voice, and internationally in Stern, GEO, Focus, L’Express and The London Independent Magazine. His work has been exhibited across the United States. He is the recipient of the Leica Medal of Excellence, a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship, a Nieman Fellowship at Harvard and an Alicia Patterson Journalism Fellowship. A graduate of Reed College in Portland, Oregon, he obtained his MFA in Visual Arts from the University of California, San Diego.




drkrm is an exhibition space dedicated to the display of popular cultural images, fine art photography, documentary and photo journalism, cutting edge and alternative photographic processes. In addition, drkrm is a full-service black & white photo lab.  drkrm is located at 727 S. Spring Street in the Gallery Row district of Downtown Los Angeles. Regular hours are Wednesday-Saturday 12-6, Sunday 12-4 and by appointment.

All gallery events are free and open to the public.






home