1150 25th St /
McEvoy Foundation for the Arts
Opening Reception: September 28th | 5pm–8pm
Michael Jang’s California, the artist’s first retrospective exhibition, explores Michael Jang’s career as a portrait and street photographer in Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay Area. While Michael Jang has had a significant career as a professional portrait photographer, he has also been photographing people in the streets for over fifty years. As a student at California Institute of the Arts and the San Francisco Art Institute in the 1970s, he demonstrated an uncanny ability to capture both the idiosyncratic and the quintessential, the raw and the exuberamt, in a wide range of subjects, from his own family at home in suburbia to celebrities of the era partying at the Beverly Hilton. Curated by Sandra S. Phillips, Michael Jang’s California offers an immersive journey into Jang’s world, vividly assembled in dozens of vintage and contemporary prints, notebooks, and ephemera from seminal projects, ranging from his early student work in the 1970s to commercial headshots of aspiring TV weather reporters in the 1980s to his series on teenage garage bands in the early 2000s. Notebooks and ephemera expand on his photographic process. Photographs from the McEvoy Family Collection situate Jang’s work among his major influences: Diane Arbus, Lee Friedlander, and Garry Winogrand.
Michael Jang (b. 1951) is a photographer who has documented a number of groups and subcultures from all strata of society. He has earned a living as a portrait photographer, capturing iconic figures such as Jimi Hendrix, Ronald Reagan, and Robin Williams, among others. His work is featured in the collections of the National Baseball Hall of Fame, Cooperstown; the New York Public Library; the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Cleveland; and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Who is Michael Jang? (Los Angeles: Atelier Éditions, 2019), the first monograph of Jang’s work, is to be released this Fall. Jang received his BFA from California Institute of the Arts, Valencia and MFA from the San Francisco Art Institute. He lives and works in San Francisco.
Sandra S. Phillips is curator emerita of photography at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, which she joined in 1987. She has organized numerous exhibitions of modern and contemporary photography including Exposed: Voyeurism, Surveillance and the Camera Since 1870, Diane Arbus Revelations, Dorothea Lange: American Photographs, and Daido Moriyama: Stray Dog, among others. Phillips was previously curator at the Vassar College Art Museum, and has taught at various institutions including the State University of New York, New Paltz; Parsons School of Design, New York; San Francisco State University; and the San Francisco Art Institute. She has authored and co-authored numerous catalogs, including Charmed Places: Hudson River Artists and Their Houses, Studios, and Vistas (New York: H.N. Abrams, 1988); Perpetual Motif: The Art of Man Ray (New York: Abbeville Press, 1989); and André Kertész: Of Paris and New York (Chicago: The Art Institute of Chicago, 1985).