Mark Ruwedel

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The Western Edge

2025
Other Artists:
Book contributor(s):
Edition:
1st
Edition size:
Out of Print
Prior edition(s):
Hardcover without a DJ as issued.
ISBN:
9781915743848
Condition: Fine

In the second volume of Mark Ruwedel’s epic study of the landscapes of Los Angeles, the artist heads to the coast – the furthest edge of the basin’s sprawl before it meets the Pacific Ocean. These absorbing and layered photographs suggest extremes of many kinds: the far reaches of urbanization, the dramatic geographies of desert and sea, the boundless ambitions of empire, and the spiraling climate conditions that most recently have seen these areas devastated by fires.

Charting a hundred-mile route from Point Mugu, north of Malibu, down to the Bolsa Chica Wetlands of Orange County, Ruwedel studies a range of intricately textured landscapes, woven with the traces of decades of human intervention and the countervailing forces of nature and time. His large-format black-and-white photography recalls iconic photographer-cartographers of the nineteenth century while calling into question the taxonomic certainty and implicit politics of their surveying projects.

Mark Ruwedel

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In the second volume of Mark Ruwedel’s epic study of the landscapes of Los Angeles, the artist heads to the coast – the furthest edge of the basin’s sprawl before it meets the Pacific Ocean. These absorbing and layered photographs suggest extremes of many kinds: the far reaches of urbanization, the dramatic geographies of desert and sea, the boundless ambitions of empire, and the spiraling climate conditions that most recently have seen these areas devastated by fires.

Charting a hundred-mile route from Point Mugu, north of Malibu, down to the Bolsa Chica Wetlands of Orange County, Ruwedel studies a range of intricately textured landscapes, woven with the traces of decades of human intervention and the countervailing forces of nature and time. His large-format black-and-white photography recalls iconic photographer-cartographers of the nineteenth century while calling into question the taxonomic certainty and implicit politics of their surveying projects.