XXX 122, 2000 - David Levinthal
About the Work
About XXX 122
This series of photographs takes figurines of fashion icons from the 1950s and takes them to a dark, sadomasochistic place. The image is a perfect example of the deep, often disturbing undercurrent that permeates David Levinthal's constructed, miniature environments ...Read More
This series of photographs takes figurines of fashion icons from the 1950s and takes them to a dark, sadomasochistic place. The image is a perfect example of the deep, often disturbing undercurrent that permeates David Levinthal's constructed, miniature environments. Like an Edward Hopper painting, his pictures not only evoke memories of days past, they conjure uncanny comparisons between the stylized toys and the people they idealize.Read Less
About the Artist
About David Levinthal
Vintage Barbie dolls and sports figurines come to life in David Levinthal's photographs. These toy characters act out scenes from graphic novels, war stories ...Read More
Vintage Barbie dolls and sports figurines come to life in David Levinthal's photographs. These toy characters act out scenes from graphic novels, war stories, and highly charged political moments. Voyeuristic and often shot like a scene from film noir, Levinthal's subjects have included WWII battle scenes, American blackface figures, baseball heroes, and cultural icons.
"I first began to work with toys as the subject matter for my artwork in 1972 while I was a graduate student in photography at Yale. Initially I was interested in the toys merely as objects. As I continued working I began to try to re-create the feelings of childhood play by photographing toy soldiers on the floor of my bedroom and using simple painted wood blocks to represent buildings and cities. I quickly found that narrow focus that came from photographing objects less than an inch tall gave the toys more life and a sense of realism that was not inherent in them. Setting up the toy figures is just the beginning. The set itself is just the background. It is a scene. And it is within and from that scene that the images themselves are found."Read Less
"I first began to work with toys as the subject matter for my artwork in 1972 while I was a graduate student in photography at Yale. Initially I was interested in the toys merely as objects. As I continued working I began to try to re-create the feelings of childhood play by photographing toy soldiers on the floor of my bedroom and using simple painted wood blocks to represent buildings and cities. I quickly found that narrow focus that came from photographing objects less than an inch tall gave the toys more life and a sense of realism that was not inherent in them. Setting up the toy figures is just the beginning. The set itself is just the background. It is a scene. And it is within and from that scene that the images themselves are found."Read Less
Description
Color photograph made with archival pigments on fine art rag paper with matte finish.Authentication
Includes a Certificate of Authenticity and an artist signed label on verso.Dimensions
This print contains a border as dictated by the artist to allow for framing and the quoted dimensions are for the paper size and not the printed size of the image itself.Shipping
Unframed works ship in 7-10 business days. Framed works ship in 10-14 business days.ARTSPACE ADVISOR
We are here to help. Please let us know if you have any questions about this work, the artist, collecting in general or artists you'd like to see on Artspace. Please call us at (212) 675-5804 or email service@artspace.com and we'll respond within 24 hours.




