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History: Photographs by David Levinthal

Thursday, June 5, 2014, 12 a.m.,

David Levinthal’s most recent series, History, is a culmination of his work over the last three-and-a-half decades. Like his previous bodies of work, the best-known of which include Hitler Moves East (1975–77), Modern Romance (1984–86), The Wild West (1987–89), and Barbie (1998–99), History speaks to the way in which popular imagery infiltrates memory, imagination, and identity.

To make his work, Levinthal (American, b. 1949) begins by finding vintage figurines and play sets through his now long-established network of toy sellers and collectors, and then creates elaborate scenes based on events in history, especially as they are depicted in visual culture. The compositions are reminiscent of famous images from art history, television, and movies, but are not exact replicas. Instead, they are imaginative recreations that paraphrase their source material. This increases the scenarios’ semblance of realism, in that the viewer interprets them as moments near the time of the iconic pictures, but it also introduces a note of disjuncture to the scenes.

Levinthal then photographs his scenes and creates large, history-painting-sized inkjet prints. The resulting works, in which notions of play and fantasy intermingle with history and memory, suggest—astutely and without judgment—the inevitable role that images play in both our understanding of the past and our personal relationship with the course of history.

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Contact Manager of Traveling Exhibitions, George Eastman Museum: [email protected]

Quick Facts
Participation Fee $20,000 + Round trip shipping and Insurance
Booking Period 12 Weeks (Fee will be prorated for 8 and 10 week bookings)
Contents 13 framed photographs, 61 x 79 inches
Size 162 linear feet