Pale Subtropical Light comprises a critical photographic inquiry into the career and legacy of Hollywood icon Jane Fonda, mid-century modern architecture in California and historical locations such as the Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument in Montana.
M+B is pleased to present Pale Subtropical Light, a selection of new works by Matthew Porter. The
exhibition comprises a critical photographic inquiry into the career and legacy of Hollywood icon Jane Fonda,
mid-century modern architecture in California and historical locations such as the Little Bighorn Battlefield
National Monument in Montana. Pale Subtropical Light runs from January 7 through February 11, 2012, with an
opening reception for the artist on Saturday, January 7 from 6 to 8 pm.
The exhibition’s six discrete subjects are threaded together to form a reticulated pattern of overlapping subject
matter. The title is lifted from “Eureka!,” a 1978 essay by John Gregory Dunne. The essay tracks the attitudes of
New York City literati toward his decision to move to Los Angeles in 1964 and their unfounded accusations that
he traded the cultural capital of opinions for the cultural capital of images. Los Angeles is often described in
terms of mirages and dreams, so it is fitting that Dunne uses hallucinatory imagery to describe his attachment to
the city: “I am . . . attached to the deceptive perspectives of the pale subtropical light.” His description of
quotidian beauty is used to counter the observations of others on the city in which he lives. He writes of the
chimerical possibilities of “psychic and physical slippage” that a place like Los Angeles can instill in the astute
observer, using examples of the disconnect between history and experience. In the exhibition, the various
pictures explore the relationship between the vivid imagery of historical American myths and the iconicity of the
photographs (or lack of) that represent them.
In 1972, Jane Fonda traveled to North Vietnam. Like hundreds of other Americans before her, she was seeking
to confirm rumors of the deadly effects of chemical weapons and the bombing of civilian targets by the American
Military and to deliver mail to American POWs. On her last day there, she was driven to the site of an anti-aircraft
gun emplacement (inactive at the time), surrounded by American, Japanese and Vietnamese journalists, and
casually directed to sit at the helm of the weapon. Members of the local community sang Fonda a song, and she
responded with an emphatic performance of a Vietnamese anti-war song written by students in Saigon. It was a
rapturous moment. Everyone applauded, and Fonda, exhausted by the manic pace of her tour, clasped her
hands together and thanked her hosts. A photograph from this encounter became the focal point of the 1972
short film titled Letter to Jane, a footnote to Tout Va Bien, and a pinnacle of Goddard pedagogy. Fonda survived
her time in the jungle, but the legacy of those photographs continues to stalk her.
The jungle landscapes were made on the Hawaiian island of Kauai. Kauai has a long history as a location for
Hollywood war movies because of the aesthetic approximation of its jungle foliage to Southeast Asia and the
Pacific Theater. In recent decades, however, the film industry has largely moved on to more arid climates to
address more contemporary conflicts.
In 1947, architectural photographer Julius Schulman photographed Ayn Rand in her Richard Neutra designed
house. Neutra originally designed the house for the Austrian film director Josef von Sternberg (mentioned by
Dunne in “Eureka!”) in Chatsworth, Los Angeles. The Schulman photographs have been scanned, cropped,
overlaid with grass and plants from the Little Bighorn Battlefield, and re-photographed. The result is a layered
collage, formed by multiple exposures, depicting the collision of various historical and ideological subject matter.
In 1876, General George Armstrong Custer, notoriously rapacious, led a doomed but credulous battalion of 210
soldiers along a series of bluffs above an Indian river encampment. When he realized he was outnumbered, his
military erudition dictated that he seek further high ground. What was revealed at the top of Last Stand Hill was
the vertiginous optical sensation of endless, undulating green hills. Clearly, the preferable perspective on that
day was from the denser foliage of the valley below.
In the exhibition there are three photographs of hornets’ nests piled on tables and chairs. The nests have either
been seasonably abandoned, or the hornets were exterminated. They are spherical, composed of concentric
wrappings of what looks like low-grade cardboard—a material that’s been chewed and spit out by the hornets to
synthesize into paper. The annual apocalypse affects every colony, but often leaves the nests intact.
Matthew Porter (b. 1975) received his BA from Bard College in 1998 and his MFA from Bard College and Bard-
ICP in 2006. His work often features historical mash-ups, collapsing disparate events and cultural references
within single frames or spreading them out over a series of tightly edited photographs. Recent exhibitions include
a solo show at Invisible Exports in New York, and he was included in the International Center of Photography’s
Perspectives 2010. In 2010, he curated shows at Mount Tremper Arts in upstate New York and M+B in Los
Angeles. Porter lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. This is his second solo exhibition at M+B
This exhibition is part of Pacific Standard Time: Art in L.A. 1945–1980, a Getty initiative that brings together more
than sixty cultural institutions from across Southern California to examine the history of contemporary art in Los
Angeles
Opening: Saturday, January 7, 2012 from 6 – 8 pm
M+B
612 North Almont Drive - Los Angeles
Tuesday – Saturday, 10 am – 6 pm, and by appointment
Freea admission