A Comprehensive Collection of Five Decades
At his untimely death in 1998, photographer Ricardo Valverde (b. 1946) had for almost three decades documented the various communities and social spaces of Los Angeles. Though he began this lifelong pursuit while still in college, capturing the streets of his South Central neighborhood and the urban landscape of downtown Los Angeles, it wasn't until the Watts Riots of 1965 that Valverde and his work became deeply political.
Featuring more than one hundred illustrations, this book records the unfolding of Valverde's vision — from his first photographs of L.A. streets as repositories of the city's social history, to his socially and politically acute portraiture, to his surrealist-inflected mixed-media work late in his career, to his role in the formation of Self-Help Graphics & Art, Ojos, and Chicano Art Collectors Anonymous.
Available now from University of Minnesota Press — $29.95 Paperback