



Some Los Angeles Apartments
2006
Ed Ruscha 's Some Los Angeles Apartments (1965) is a seminal artist's book that exemplifies his radically matter-of-fact approach to photography and publishing. Composed of stark black-and-white images documenting ordinary apartment buildings across Los Angeles, the book treats the city's everyday architecture with deliberate neutrality and restraint. Ruscha famously described his photographs as "a collection of facts" and his books as "a collection of readymades," underscoring his conceptual position that selection and presentation, rather than expression, generate meaning. In this context, Some Los Angeles Apartments functions less as a photographic project than as an object-based artwork, where repetition, sequencing, and banality become the content. As one of Ed Ruscha's most influential early books, this fine art multiple helped redefine the artist's book as an autonomous art form and remains a cornerstone of conceptual art, directly shaped by Marcel Duchamp's notion of the readymade and Ruscha's enduring fascination with the overlooked language of the American urban landscape. "The most renowned series of artist's books in the history of the genre, Ed Ruscha's works still retain their capacity to surprise, delight and puzzle in equal measure. In the several decades since they were published, they have been much exhibited, written about and analyzed, yet they somehow are still objects of mystery and fascination, beguiling in their utter simplicity and immutable rightness." – Parr, M. & Badger, G., The Photobook: A History (Volume II), London: Phaidon, 2006, pp.140-1
- Medium
- Multiples
- Spotted At
- Gallery · MLTPL
Notes
From MLTPL New Art Editions collection. Handle: ed-ruscha-some-los-angeles-apartments.
For Sale — $1200
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