Now Open

Lewis Baltz: The Deaths in Newport

Lewis Baltz

Apr 1 – May 30

Gallery Luisotti
Gallery

Gallery Luisotti

818 S Broadway Suite 1001, 10th floor, CA 90014

Tuesday – Saturday 10:30am – 6:00pm

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About

Gallery Luisotti is proud to present Lewis Baltz: The Deaths in Newport, marking the first public presentation in over thirty years of the photographer's largely unseen research project. The Deaths in Newport (1995) was first and only exhibited in the United States at Gallery Luisotti in April 1996. Thirty years later, to the date, the gallery recreates this presentation, returning Baltz's experimental work to public view and revisiting his extended engagement with the materials and conventions of what we now know today as the true crime genre. At the center of The Deaths in Newport is the notorious 1947 Overell murder case, at the time one of the longest and most sensational trials in California history. Two young lovers, 17-year-old Beulah Louise Overell and her 21-year-old fiancé, George "Bud" Gollum, were accused of using dynamite to blow up a family boat in Newport Harbor, killing Beulah's parents. Early reports framed the incident as an open-and-shut case, with evidence suggesting a clear motive. The proceedings lasted nineteen weeks and drew national attention, with daily press coverage that transformed the Newport Beach courtroom into a stage for one of the era's most closely followed murder trials. The trial left a lasting imprint on the local community. Baltz approached the case through archival research and photographic sequencing, an account further unsettled by an unexpected personal connection: his father, the local mortician, served as the star witness during the trial. He spent several years assembling court records, press accounts, photographs, and first-hand testimony. Originally produced by Paradox (Amsterdam) as an interactive CD-ROM photo-essay, the work is presented here in an early digital video format that preserves its forensic structure and sequencing. Developed at the moment when personal computing and digital media were beginning to reshape photographic storytelling, the project employs an experimental approach that moves beyond the printed photograph and gallery wall. Baltz's video draws our attention to his photograph 11777 Foothill Blvd., Los Angeles, CA (1991), an image that also appeared in the photo-essay and later served as the introductory image to his 1992 LACMA retrospective, Rule Without Exception (March 26 – May 31, 1992). Unlike the found images that structure much of the photo-essay, this photograph was made by Baltz himself while researching The Deaths in Newport. The image was taken at the site where members of the Los Angeles Police Department viciously beat Rodney King. Baltz's photograph is not a literal depiction of the incident, but a view from that very spot looking outward. While Baltz never explicitly addressed why he included the image in the narration of The Deaths in Newport, the two works offer a parallel exploration of how he approached the afterlives of public trauma through a forensic mode. Viewed together, they reveal an unexpected dimension of Baltz's practice in the early 1990s, when his long-standing interest in photographic evidence and institutional power found a new form in the emerging language of digital media.

Tags

photographyvideodigital mediacontemporarysololandscapedocumentarytrue crimeforensic
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