Eternal Construction: Photographic Perspectives on Southern California’s Built Environment examines a region perpetually under transformation—a place where expansion and decay coexist, and reinvention is woven into the very fabric of daily life. Drawn from the Laguna Art Museum’s permanent collection, this exhibition unites artists who have grappled with the shifting realities of urbanization, infrastructure, and environmental change. Rather than offering a sweeping overview, it invites viewers into an intimate, layered encounter with artists whose multiple works trace evolving conversations about the uses—and misuses—of land.
The exhibition reveals a complex dialogue between differing approaches to the built landscape. Some artists document the physical world with an unflinching realism, chronicling freeways, construction sites, and abandoned spaces as testaments to human ambition and neglect. Others approach these environments conceptually, abstracting architectural forms or reimagining familiar urban spaces through manipulation, staging, or intervention. Each perspective sheds light on Southern California as both a site and a symbol—where dreams of progress and the realities of environmental strain continually collide.
Featured artists include Lewis Baltz,
Jeff Brouws, Laurie Brown, Luke Erickson, Jacques Garnier, Marcia Hafif, John Humble, Barbara Kasten, Jeremy Kidd, Tom Lamb, The Legacy Group, Deborah Oropallo,
Julius Shulman, and Robert von Sternberg. Together, their works form a visual narrative of impermanence—capturing the tension between natural beauty and human construction, between idealism and entropy.
Through their varied interpretations, these artists prompt reflection on what it means to build, to erase, and to rebuild again in a region defined by constant motion. Organized by Laguna Art Museum and guest curated by Tyler Stallings, the exhibition is supported by Mike Johnson and Taka Oiwa, underscoring the museum’s commitment to exploring the dynamic interplay between art, place, and transformation.
Image:
Jacques Garnier, At the Crossroad, 2015. Gelatin silver print. 20 x 30 in. 2018.018. Gift of the artist © Jacques Garnier