Whitewash

Whitewash by Nicholas Alan Cope, published by powerHouse Books on April 16, 2013, is a striking exploration of Los Angeles through the lens of architectural photography. This first edition, comprising 96 pages, presents a unique vision of the city, focusing on its everyday architecture while capturing the contrasts that define its character. Cope’s work delves into the interplay of light and shadow, revealing the beauty and simplicity of the urban landscape amidst the complexities of its cultural narratives.
In this collection, readers will find photographs that evoke the dualities of Los Angeles, from its glamorous allure to its underlying cynicism. Cope strips away distractions to highlight the architectural forms that shape the city, utilizing stark contrasts of light to accentuate their elegance. The images reflect the profound cultural and historical imprint of the city, inviting contemplation of its architectural and industrial themes. Whitewash serves as a visual narrative that encapsulates the essence of LA, revealing the stark beauty of a city often overshadowed by its own contradictions.
Official synopsis Publisher
“The results of his monochromatic efforts are staggering, and blow almost all other architectural photography out the water.” -It’s Nice That
LA is a city of contrasts-the famous and unknown, blinding light and impenetrable shadow, wealth and poverty, massive success and bitter failure. The promise of fame, fortune, sun, and beauty have lured millions to its beaches, hills, and valleys crammed with low slung buildings and palm-tree-lined boulevards. But beneath this thin veneer of perfection, Los Angeles is a city where the dueling public narratives of glamour and cynicism have inspired the sun-kissed perfection of Aaron Spelling along with the sun-bleached paranoia of David Lynch, the placid malaise of Sofia Coppola and the pulpy violence of Quentin Tarantino, the easy ascension ofPretty Womanand the wrenching sorrow and pain of a fall from grace as depicted in the classicSunset Boulevard.
Nicholas Alan Cope’s photographs evoke a unique vision of Los Angeles and its contrasts as seen exclusively through its everyday architecture. Searching for the sublime core of the city’s true nature, Cope strips away the extraneous, and focuses on the sheer beauty and simplicity of the cityscape. To an outsider, the profound cultural, historical, and architectural imprint of the City of Angels can be lost amongst the unsightly sprawl of stucco, strip malls, and irrelevant adornment. While the sunlight can be unforgiving and harsh, bleaching the landscape into a pale hue, the allure, for Cope, lies in the consistency and ubiquity of the buildings combined with the severity of the light accentuating the dramatic elegance of the architecture.Whitewashutilizes the whitest whites, the blackest blacks, and the modern and stark architecture of an idealized future that never arrived to tell the visual story of LA’s uniquely conflicted soul.
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