“I like to keep it awkward.”
Alex Prager
Alex Prager
The self taught American photographer Alex Prager first showed her pictures in
the laundry room of the apartment building she then called home. As she told American
Photo’s Marc Erwin Babej,
“At the time, I was living in an apartment
building in Korea Town. I used to hang up pictures in the laundry room and in
the morning I would see which pictures were gone. That way, I could see what
people liked.”
Prager grew up amidst the
glamour and artifice of Hollywood and at the age of 20 she was working as a
receptionist, a long term prospect that horrified her. She yearned for
something that she could feel passionate about. “So I started going to museums
and art shows, and wanted to see if I could draw or paint. When I was 21, I
came across the Eggleston exhibit at the Getty Museum. Within one week, I
bought a used Nikon N90-S and equipment on EBay,” she recalls. Fortunately
for the novice photographer it came with a manual on how to use darkroom
equipment.
Prager’s first photographic
forays were in the street photography genre, but it was not long before the
siren call of her home town’s famed industry became the driving force for the
work that has become her signature.
Dramatic staged photographs
that recall the golden years of Hollywood with their over the top production
values in general and lighting in particular. As she has said, “With that kind
of lighting, anything can happen. It draws you in. There can be a lot of dark
things happening – things that might not have been pleasant to watch, but the
lighting aestheticizes them and makes watching the movie irresistible.”
Likewise the use of saturated
color in her work, as Prager told the Guardian
Newspaper’s Alexandra Spring, “I thought it added this
strange lie on top of the truth that I thought was just a little bit creepier
and more interesting to work with. When it’s over the top with saturation and
blue skies and bright red lips, over-the-top Kodachrome, I think it plays into
our nostalgia and our familiarity … but do we really know what’s going in that
picture? It’s always that thing that throws you off balance.”
To
which Prager added, “You really feel like
you are not quite sure what world you are in, if it’s real or if it’s fake and
I think that’s something we can relate to in the world that we are living in
right now.”
Prager’s work can be seen at Melbourne’s
National Gallery of
Victoria until the 19th of April and at Hong Kong’s Lehmann
Maupin Gallery until the 19th of May.
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