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Desert to Suburb, framing the American Dream

Stephane Couturier's photograph, Fenetre, East Lake Greens, San Diego, captures the transformation of a suburban community. The image shows a half-built house framing a view of newly completed homes, construction work, and the untouched California desert. It raises questions about our impact on the environment and the American dream.

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  • blobby green style avatar for user Brett
    Why did the artist decide to include the very prominent diagonal plank in the window frame? It seems a bit like a symbolic "do not build" sign.
    (2 votes)
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  • aqualine tree style avatar for user David Alexander
    Though I'm not from San Diego, I did grow up in the San Fernando Valley (a couple hundred miles north) and I recall open land at its western end that was still fields and dairy land when I was a child, land that is now all housed over. The picture from San Diego is all too familiar to me.
    (1 vote)
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Video transcript

(light piano music) - [Steven] We're in the LACMA Study Center for Photography and Works on Paper. This is a place where we can bring photographs out to look at that are not on exhibition. And today we're looking at a work by Stephane Couturier, a large photograph called Fenetre, East Lake Greens, San Diego. - [Elizabeth] This photograph comes from a series Couturier made. He'd been invited to photograph in the San Diego-Tijuana region in Southern California. And his whole career up 'til this point has been looking at transformation, looking at urban environments that are always changing. Here in this series, you see a suburban community that is partially lived-in, partially being built. And then in the background, you get the whole sense of the vast California desert that this housing community is taking over and coming up against. - [Steven] One important issue is the formal beauty of this print. We have the built environment in the foreground, and then two zones beyond that. This parched desert where seemingly nothing grows. But beyond that, this blue zone where we can just make out distant mountains. - [Elizabeth] There's so much visual information. But it's also the framing of it. We're standing in an unfinished building, creating a window for us to look through onto the settlement. There's the whole history, both in painting as well as in photography of using the window. And it's multilayered itself because it's how photographs work in a sense. You need that open and closed to get the light into the camera to capture the image. But it's also more metaphorical or symbolic of a window onto the world that photographers are looking at. So in very simple but very smart gesture, Couturier is referencing that whole history as well as having us look at this community that is being built in front of our eyes. - [Steven] Thinking back to Romanticism, the paintings of Casper David Friedrich, or even to the first years of the Renaissance, that surface of the painting itself is a picture plane through which we see into a world beyond. - [Elizabeth] You move up into 20th century photographers, and whether it's Alfred Stieglitz, photographers looking at the very artistic qualities of the medium, street photographers who are doing more documentary photography, this idea of the window plays itself throughout all of it, as well as lot of contemporary photographers. - [Steven] But here the frame is really part of the photograph. It is part of the subject matter. It is this half-constructed house with raw lumber. - [Elizabeth] From where we're standing, we're inside of this house. Because of the crispness in foreground on that ledge you can see a nail, you can even see some of the marks that the construction workers have used. You get the sense of this being in process, which I think is so important because that mirrors the subject in the other parts of the photograph. - [Steven] And that process couldn't be more evident. We have just newly completed homes in the foreground. We see two cars that sit in the driveway of one of those completed houses. - [Elizabeth] You see those two cars, you see the potted plants, and then you start to notice the trucks from the construction workers parked on the street behind those initial homes. And you see the roofing materials stacked up. And then you see the landscape that hasn't yet been taken over by the housing development. - [Steven] Taken over's the perfect word because this is a landscape in transition. And it poses, I think, profound philosophical questions about our use of the landscape. More particularly, of this landscape. This is an arid environment, not a hospitable environment. And yet, we're imposing our vision of the American dream, of a free-standing suburban house with a perfect lawn in a desert. - [Elizabeth] California has a whole history of water use, of settlement, going back to earlier centuries. But when we think about the 20th century, not only Southern California but Arizona and parts of New Mexico, parts of Nevada, there's been huge growth in population through homes like this. There's also increased political power and re-centering of certain national dialogues and political dialogue. (light piano music)