Wallis Annenberg has announced that the Photo Space will not be re-opening. Read her letter of appreciation on the closing of a chapter in Los Angeles.
Photo by: David Taylor
David Taylor
Photographer
David Taylor has been photographing along the U.S.-Mexico border between El Paso/Juarez and Tijuana/San Diego over the last four years. The project is organized around an effort to document the 276 monuments that mark the international boundary west of the Rio Grande. Documenting the monuments, installed in the 1890s, has inevitably led to encounters with migrants, smugglers, Border Patrol agents, Minutemen, Federales and local residents of the borderlands. During the period of Tayor’s work the United States Border Patrol has doubled in size and over 600 miles of pedestrian fencing and vehicle barrier have been constructed. The border is currently under constant surveillance with a variety of low-tech and high-tech apparatus. To date the Border Patrol has attained “operational control” in many areas, however people and drugs continue to cross. David Taylor was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for his work in 2008 and a monograph of the project has just been released by Radius Books. His work can be found in collections including the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston and the Museum of COntemporary Photography at Columbia College. He is represented by James Kelly Contemporary in Santa Fe, New Mexico.