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Home / Arts and Entertainment / Photographer's Inner Observer Captured American Life

Photographer's Inner Observer Captured American Life

2 Feb

•

Summary

  • A 1969 psychiatric review called Sultan an anxious observer.
  • His book "Water Over Thunder" explores his life and work.
  • Sultan photographed ordinary homes and staged desires.

A 1969 psychiatric review identified photographer Larry Sultan as an "anxiety-prone individual" and a "left-out observer looking inside," a description that presaged his distinctive approach to documenting American life. His prolific career, spanning from the 1970s until his death in 2009 at age 63, explored documentary, fiction, and appropriation.

Now, "Water Over Thunder," a new book published in collaboration with his family, delves into Sultan's reflections on his craft. The book includes personal ephemera, journal entries, and his striking images, offering an intimate self-portrait.

Sultan's lens captured the San Fernando Valley's ordinary homes rented for porn productions and intimate portraits of figures like Paris Hilton. His work often imbued everyday scenes with a "hazy familiarity" and an eye for the "idiosyncratic and ironic," aiming to reveal the mysterious just out of view.

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His seminal work, "The Valley" (1998-2004), explored the interiors of these rented homes, blurring the lines between staged desire and the performance of modern American family life. Sultan viewed himself as a "forensic photographer" grappling with ambivalence.

Another key project, "Pictures from Home," documented his parents over nine years. This work used private images to scrutinize the "Republicans had hijacked the family" narrative and explored the complexities of family dynamics within the suburban California landscape.

Beyond his photography, Sultan was also an influential teacher, starting at his alma mater in 1978 and later for two decades at the California College of the Arts. His students remember him as a "deeply funny, kind, sharp and devoted teacher" with an enduring curiosity.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
"Water Over Thunder" reveals Larry Sultan's intimate self-portrait through his personal reflections, journal entries, and photographs, exploring his distinctive approach to American domestic life.
Larry Sultan's photography was characterized by a "hazy familiarity" and an eye for the "idiosyncratic and ironic," often capturing ordinary homes, staged desires, and family dynamics with a unique perspective.
Larry Sultan influenced photography through works like "The Valley" and "Pictures from Home," and also significantly impacted students as a devoted professor at the California College of the Arts.

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