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Thumbnail-size images of copyrighted artworks are displayed under fair use, in accordance with guidelines recommended by the Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for the Visual Arts, published by the College Art Association in February 2015.
Route 127 near Death Valley National Monument, California
Len Jenshel (American, born in 1949)
1990
Medium/Technique
Photograph, chromogenic print (Ektacolor)
Dimensions
Sheet: 50.8 x 60.96 cm (20 x 24 in.)
Credit Line
Sophie M. Friedman Fund
Accession Number1992.67
NOT ON VIEW
CollectionsContemporary Art, Americas, Photography
ClassificationsPhotographs
The landscape of the American West has been a favorite subject of photographers since the invention of the medium. Len Jenshel fell under the spell of the western landscape's great expanse, having first discovered the region as a young child. He returned as an adult to document - with irony and a sense of humor - the impact of tourism and the automobile on the country's national parks. He had long admired the hallucinatory detail and unpeopled views of his nineteenth-century predecessors, but his large-scale color photographs also include signs of man's encroachment on even our most protected wilderness spaces. Here, for example, Jenshel captures a wry panoramic view of Death Valley complete with a topsy-turvy reflection of his lunch in his car's windshield.
InscriptionsVerso, signed in black ink, l.l.: Len Jenshel. Verso, in black ink, across bottom: 2/25. Route 127 near Death Valley National Monument, California, 1990. (5735.5).