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Forever

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Forever

ForeverĀ comprises photographs taken in the downtown area of Los Angeles and the poorer neighbourhoods of Compton, Watts and South Central, made between 2007–2012. The work traces the movements of the homeless, in images which take up the point of view of the homeless person. So, rather than photographing the material trace – a chair or bed – Hernandez photographs what might be might seen and observed from the street itself.

The title was drawn from a previous workĀ Landscapes for the HomelessĀ (1996), exhibited at the Sprengel Museum in Hanover. The catalogue included a conversation between Hernandez and Lewis Baltz titledĀ Forever Homeless: A Dialogue. It was Baltz who chose the title, and Hernandez speaks of its prevailing significance, ā€œThe title is very important because, as I write this, fifteen years on, the homeless population of Los Angeles has only increased; I could technically keep photographing this subject, making these kinds of pictures, forever.ā€

Anthony Hernandez (b. 1947) served for two years as a medic in the US Army in the Vietnam War, before taking up photography in 1969. His projects includeĀ Landscapes for the HomelessĀ (1988-91),Ā Waiting for Los AngelesĀ (1996-98),Ā Pictures for RomeĀ (2000),Ā Everything (The Los Angeles River Basin)Ā (2003-4) andĀ Rodeo Drive, 1984Ā (MACK, 2012).

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ForeverĀ comprises photographs taken in the downtown area of Los Angeles and the poorer neighbourhoods of Compton, Watts and South Central, made between 2007–2012. The work traces the movements of the homeless, in images which take up the point of view of the homeless person. So, rather than photographing the material trace – a chair or bed – Hernandez photographs what might be might seen and observed from the street itself.

The title was drawn from a previous workĀ Landscapes for the HomelessĀ (1996), exhibited at the Sprengel Museum in Hanover. The catalogue included a conversation between Hernandez and Lewis Baltz titledĀ Forever Homeless: A Dialogue. It was Baltz who chose the title, and Hernandez speaks of its prevailing significance, ā€œThe title is very important because, as I write this, fifteen years on, the homeless population of Los Angeles has only increased; I could technically keep photographing this subject, making these kinds of pictures, forever.ā€

Anthony Hernandez (b. 1947) served for two years as a medic in the US Army in the Vietnam War, before taking up photography in 1969. His projects includeĀ Landscapes for the HomelessĀ (1988-91),Ā Waiting for Los AngelesĀ (1996-98),Ā Pictures for RomeĀ (2000),Ā Everything (The Los Angeles River Basin)Ā (2003-4) andĀ Rodeo Drive, 1984Ā (MACK, 2012).