Surreal snapshots of everyday Los Angeles
- Text by Miss Rosen
- Photography by Isaac Diggs
Los Angeles is one of the most imaged cities in the world, constantly cranking out plastic portraits of both the people and the place, creating a way of seeing informed by Hollywood itself.
Hailing from Cleveland, African-American photographer Isaac Diggs was drawn to the City of Angels in order to consider the distance between image and reality. “I am fascinated by the way my impression of a place is informed by media long before I have ever set foot there,” he tells Huck. “Los Angeles is depicted countless times in movies like Blade Runner. But for me growing up, the Rodney King beating and the OJ Simpson trial shaped my sense of what LA was.”
“I had to think about the fact that I had seen those events as images – I was not there. Those images were so powerful to me in defining what the city looked like. I wanted to go out there to photograph how my looking at the city would be informed by my perceptions of it.”
Diggs began travelling to Los Angeles in 2009, and over the next four years made a series of photographs collected in the new book, Middle Distance or The Anxiety of Influence (Kris Graves Projects), which features essays by Tisa Bryant and Arthur Jafa. The title comes from Diggs’s experience making the work, using a wide array of formats to explore the complex and layered nuances of Los Angeles life.
“I started going out to LA after the financial crisis of 2009, and there was a lot of talk of contagion and rising poverty,” he explains. “Obama had just been elected President, so that was an interesting moment. I would go for one or two weeks at a time. I would keep office hours, and would work on the street from nine to five. I made a circuit revisiting places in Downtown LA, Santa Monica, and the Valley.”
Throughout the project, Diggs finds his footing the middle distance: the space that is neither too intimate nor too distant to participate.
“The work includes pictures made with about four different cameras,” he adds. “I wanted to see if I could make pictures that looked the same regardless of format. Some of the pictures are film and some are digital. That’s not something I thought about as I started but it evolved over years, and then it became a bit of a game.”
“There is a constant debate about what Los Angeles is that I find fascinating. The role it has played in crafting a representation of itself and the country makes it unique. As a photographer, I could constantly make work against those images. I could have a conversation with the images that we are all exposed to.”
Middle Distance or The Anxiety of Influence is out now on Kris Graves Projects.
Follow Miss Rosen on Twitter.
Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.
Latest on Huck
Nxdia: “Poems became an escape for me”
What Made Me — In this series, we ask artists and rebels about the forces and experiences that shaped who they are. Today, it’s Egyptian-British alt-pop shapeshifter Nxdia.
Written by: Nxdia
Kathy Shorr’s splashy portraits inside limousines
The Ride of a Lifetime — Wanting to marry a love of cars and photography, Kathy Shorr worked as a limousine driver in the ’80s to use as a studio on wheels. Her new photobook explores her archive.
Written by: Miss Rosen
Lewd tales of live sex shows in ’80s Times Square
Peep Man — Before its LED-beaming modern refresh, the Manhattan plaza was a hotbed for seedy transgression. A new memoir revisits its red light district heyday.
Written by: Miss Rosen
In a world of noise, IC3PEAK are finding radicality in the quiet
Coming Home — Having once been held up as a symbol of Russian youth activism and rebellion, the experimental duo are now living in exile. Their latest album explores their new reality.
Written by: Isaac Muk
Are we steamrolling towards the apocalypse?
One second closer to midnight — While the rolling news cycle, intensifying climate crisis and rapidly advancing technology can make it feel as if the end days are upon us, newsletter columnist Emma Garland remembers that things have always been terrible, and that is a natural part of human life.
Written by: Emma Garland
In a city of rapid gentrification, one south London estate stands firm
A Portrait of Central Hill — Social housing is under threat across the British capital. But residents of the Central Hill estate in Crystal Palace are determined to save their homes, and their community.
Written by: Alex King