Search results
Jul 14, 2020 · Justine Kurland Reflects on Her Photographs of Teenage Girl Runaways. Between 1997 and 2002, the photographer portrayed teenage girls as rebels, offering a radical vision of community against the masculine myth of the American landscape. Justine Kurland, Orchard, 1998. Featured - July 14, 2020.
Altogether, Kurland published 69 pictures of girls in a series called "Girl Pictures." The staged photos take place in urban and wilderness settings, with girls depicted as though to imply they are runaways, hopeful and independent.
Dec 17, 2012 · In this BAFTA Guru Commissioners interview, Sky's Head of Factual Entertainment tells us why all she's really looking for is a good story.
On view at Mitchell-Innes & Nash through June 29, this show of Justine Kurland’s Girl Pictures (1997-2002) is well timed. It’s the 20 th anniversary of the first printing of the series, 69 staged photographs of adolescent girls living (apparently) off the grid.
Jul 19, 2010 · Justine Kurland, known for her idyllic portraits of girl runaways, commune hippies, and mothers with their children, spends most of the year on the road, a traveler searching out other travelers.
Jul 7, 2020 · Between 1997 and 2002, Justine Kurland travelled across the North American wilderness, capturing teenage girls in a series of staged images that express freedom and a new kind of utopia. She looks back on the project’s significance here.
Photographer Justine Kurland reclaimed this space in her now-iconic series of images of teenage girls, taken between 1997 and 2002 on the road in the American wilderness. “I staged the girls as a standing army of teenaged runaways in resistance to patriarchal ideals,” says Kurland.