Face in the Crowd. an exhibition featuring new large-scale color photographs of elaborately-staged crowd scenes and a film by the same name that explore the notion of the individual within the masses.
M+B is pleased to announce Alex Prager: Face in the Crowd, an exhibition featuring
new large-scale color photographs of elaborately-staged crowd scenes and a film by
the same name that explore the notion of the individual within the masses, the
boundary between public and private space and the psychological complexities of
human interaction. This body of work was created specifically for Prager’s first
major solo museum exhibition in the United States at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in
Washington, D.C. that opened in November 2013. Alex Prager: Face in the Crowd will
run at M+B from January 25 to March 8, 2014, with an opening reception on Saturday,
January 25 from 6 to 8 pm.
For ten years, Prager has staged imaginary scenes for her camera—dream worlds in
Technicolor, rife with tension and melodramatic fictions. Deftly blending archetypes
from post-war America, her images have re-enacted and burlesqued media portrayals of
women, drawing from classic Hollywood movies, fashion advertising and icons of
documentary photography. Face in the Crowd expands on her tradition, but in her most
ambitious and complex way to date. Blurring the line between fiction and reality,
Prager directed the actions of hundreds of costumed actors on specially constructed
sets creating congested public spaces including an airport terminal, a City Hall
lobby, a beach and the Sunset 5 movie theatre. Densely detailed and shot from
seemingly impossible vantage points, the work enacts psychological narratives of
private and public revelation, repulsion, fear, personal safety and the desire for
basic human interaction.
“I’m fascinated by the experience of being involved in other people’s lives
accidentally,” Prager said, noting that her work has been influenced by time spent
in busy cities such as New York and London. “Crowds have always been an interest of
mine. It may look like a sea of people, but there are so many interesting stories,
all colliding silently.”
The stories of the various characters within these crowds culminate in a new film,
featuring actress Elizabeth Banks. Together, the film and the photographs uphold a
portrait of the individual within the complexity of the larger crowd. Prager's focus
on this dynamic can be traced to specific influences: silent films like Charlie
Chaplin's Modern Times; photographers Martin Parr, Garry Winogrand, Bruce Gilden and
Helen Levitt; the darkness and the humor from Roy Andersson's film Songs from the
Second Floor; and the well- known children's books Where's Waldo? Throughout Face in
the Crowd, each character maintains their own agency within their cinematic
circumstances. In exploring the notion of identity and the performative aspects of
public life, Prager has created a universe where the crowd that gathers is the true
spectacle.
Alex Prager (b. 1979, Los Angeles) is a self-taught photographer and filmmaker who
was inspired to take up photography after seeing the color images of William
Eggleston. Her work has been exhibited in galleries and institutions worldwide, most
prominently in Alex Prager: Face in the Crowd at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in 2013
(Washington, D.C.), Alex Prager: Mise-en-scène at SCAD Museum of Art in 2013
(Savannah, GA), Alex Prager: Compulsion at FOAM Museum in 2012 (Amsterdam) and the
New Photography 2010 exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art (New York). Major awards
include the Paul Huf FOAM Award in 2012, the London Photography Award in 2006, and
Prager’s short film Touch of Evil, commissioned by The New York Times Magazine,
garnered her a 2012 Emmy Award. Prager’s work is held in the permanent collections
of the Museum of Modern Art (New York), Whitney Museum of American Art (New York),
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, North Carolina Museum of Art, Cincinnati Art
Museum, Moderna Museet (Stockholm), Kunsthaus Zurich, among others. Alex Prager
lives and works in Los Angeles.
Opening Reception Saturday, January 25 from 6-8pm
M+B
612 North Almont Drive, Los Angeles
Hours: Tuesday-Saturday 10am-6pm
Free admission