
Because suburbia occupies a dominant presence in so many lives—a place of not only residence but also of work, commerce, worship, education, and leisure—it has become a focal point for competing interests and viewpoints. The suburbs have always been a fertile space for imagining both the best and the worst of modern social life. more
Drawn Here: Sean Griffiths of FAT
Target Free Thursday Nights
Thursday, March 6 7:00 pm
Escape to the Suburbs!
Free First Saturday
Saturday, April 5 10:00 am to 3:00 pm
Next Exit: The Shifting Landscape of Suburbia
Target Free Thursday Nights
Thursday, April 24 7:00 pm

All essays are originally from the companion book for this exhibition, Worlds Away: New Suburban Landscapes. Some essays appear in excerpted form where noted.

American, b. 1937, Omaha, Nebraska; lives and works in Los Angeles
Edward Ruscha moved to Los Angeles in 1956 to study commercial art, and his artwork has been tied to the city’s landscape and culture ever since. He is probably best known for his drawings, paintings, and prints of emotive words. These text-based works gained attention in the early 1960s by drawing associations with the Pop Art movement of the period. At the same time, the artist was working on a series of artist’s books that would have an enormous influence on conceptual art and photography, such as Twenty-six Gasoline Stations and Every Building on the Sunset Strip, which featured collected series of no-frills photographs that Ruscha was taking of banal sites in and around Los Angeles. The artist revisited his 1967 book Thirtyfour Parking Lots in Los Angeles in 1999 and released a set of editioned photographs based on the volume. The aerial photographs depict mostly vacant parking lots in places such as shopping malls, stadiums, and drive-in theaters; their parallel lines form beautiful geometric patterns, while oil stains and skid marks appear like gestural marks on the black-top surface—signs of automobile activity and drivers’ proclivities. Ruscha’s work has been widely exhibited, collected, and published.
We asked people to make a video telling us about the suburbs and put it on YouTube. Selected videos are showing in the gallery at the Walker Art Center during the run of the exhibition.
Do you live in a suburb? Do you work or go to school in one? What is your experience of the “burbs? ”…
Whether you love them or hate them we’re interested in your thoughts on the phenomenon of the American suburb. We invite you to make a 5-minute video about strip malls, cul-de-sacs, office parks, and green lawns or whatever suburbia means to you. A select number of videos will be chosen to screen as part of the exhibition Worlds Away: New Suburban Landscapes in the Target Gallery from February 15 to May 18, 2008.
To participate, upload your video to YouTube and add the tag “walkerworldsaway” or post it as a response to our video above. We’ll feature all videos on the Walker’s YouTube page. To be considered for gallery screening, entries must be 5 minutes or less and be online by January 18, 2008.