ZOE CROSHER > OUT THE WINDOW (LAX) > 
PRESS RELEASE FOR LIZABETH OLIVERIA, LA > next  























*images *Out the Window (LAX) press release *Review - art blogging *Pico Iyer - The Space Between All Spaces *Norman Klein - Fourteen Ways Not to See the Airport *Julian Myers - Out the Window (LAX) *Artists' Statement (LAX) *Studio 360 - Jan 05 *Installation Shots +bio +contact +resume +goggle search (home) +writings +michelle du bois (04-) +la-like (04-) +out the window (lax) (01-04) +one year later (03-) +(in and around) la (00-01) +the santa cruz kids(96-00) +NTNTNT (2004)


Out the Window(LAX), photographs by Zoe Crosher

RECEPTION: Saturday, October 23, 2004 from 6-8 p.m. with a performance by Mads Lynnerup @ 8pm LOCATION: 2712 S. La Cienega Blvd. A map is on the website. HOURS: Tuesday-Saturday, 11am – 6pm October 23 - December 5, 2004
Lizabeth Oliveria Gallery is delighted to present Zoe Crosher in her second solo exhibition in Los Angeles, Out the Window(LAX). Each image is twenty-seven inches square, taken through windows, of planes coming in to land from the hotels and motels surrounding Los Angeles International Airport. As Julian Myers writes, “Crosher’s method works through thE difficulty of taking pictures of Los Angeles, and what she understands as its resistance to being pictured. Photography has typically been understood to be an indexical practice, one bound to recording a certain place and time; LA, however, is best characterized by constant motion, and by the duration of transit. It is a place seen through windows of cars, or airplane windows, always while in motion. How should we approach, in the artist’s words, “a place that moves in shifts and perpetual motion, with no real center, no point of concentration”? Her response is to take a sidelong glance at one of its most transitional spaces, a conduit through which people are constantly in motion: the airport. Her look is not direct or documentary, but is figured through an array of photographic feints, reflection, and circumstantial filters. The silver airplanes, when they appear in the field of these photo-maneuvers, are an image of a technological promise flashing into view, a myth of motion with bright steel skin. What they promise is a way out of the self, and a passive immersion in the endless flow of travel, promises as powerful as those made by the hotel interiors, and bound to the most powerful dreams of modernity: anonymity, frictionless travel, luxury, and freedom from the passing of time.”
Zoe Crosher’s Out the Window(LAX) has been shown at the Western Front Gallery in Vancouver, in Holland at Bruce, Rotterdam and at DCKT Contemporary in New York City. Recently included in the September Artists’ Space show, Based on a True Story, Crosher is preparing for a December show at DCKT Contemporary. She is also in production for a book-version of the LAX work, including texts by Norman Klein and Julian Myers, to be published by Printed Matter, Inc. in 2006. She completed her MFA at Calarts in the Photography and Integrated Media Programs in 2001 and graduated from the UCSC with honors in 1997 as an Art and Politics double major. She recently edited NTNTNT (2004), a book on the convoluted history of net.art and activisim on the web, and is the U.S. Editorial Assistant for Afterall, A Journal of Art Context & Inquiry. The daughter of a diplomat, growing up in Frankfurt, Moscow, Athens, Seoul & DC, she is for the moment settled in Los Angeles.

lizabeth oliveria gallery 2712 s. la cienega blvd. los angeles, ca 90034 310*837*1073 (t) 310*837*1740 (f) web@lizabetholiveria.com www.lizabetholiveria.com