Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts

Friday, March 28, 2014

Street Seen: Photos for LAX



Sidewalk peace sign, March 2014 © Marissa Roth

More photographs from my latest project which I am making as I walk around LA...

"Street Seen" was selected by the City of Los Angeles, Department of Cultural Affairs, Public Art Division, to be an exhibition at L.A. International Airport - Terminal One Arrival Lounge. I'll have 36 images on display in total and will announce the dates when I have them.

After the rain, March 2014 © Marissa Roth

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Stream of Conciousness

Bicycle Streamers, Los Angeles, March 2014 © Marissa Roth


Have taken to becoming a pedestrian in L.A., as I work on a project called, "Street Seen", that was selected by the City of Los Angeles, Department of Cultural Affairs, Public Art Division, to be an exhibition at L.A. International Airport - Terminal One Arrival Lounge.

I'm still waiting to hear the exact dates for the show, but am shooting randomly around the city on sunny days! There will be 36 images in total...am a little over halfway there!

Monday, June 10, 2013

Embrace ~ From the Archive

                                                                                       South-Central Los Angeles, CA    2008 © Marissa Roth

When I'm in L.A., I tend to spend way too much time in my car. On occasion I'll take a camera and shoot out of my car window while stopped at a red light.

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Layers of Life

                                                                  At The Huntington Gardens, Pasadena, CA   April 6th, 2013 © Marissa Roth

Spring light
Looking up

From under
Layers of leaves

From around
Layers of love

Through the
Layers of life

Merci mon homme ~

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

IRIS Nights Lecture Series


Sara Terry and Marissa Roth
War: Witnesses to Aftermath
Annenberg Space for Photography

Thursday, March 28, 2013, 6:30-8pm

"Photographer Sara Terry created The Aftermath Project, a nonprofit organization that helps photographers cover post-conflict stories. Photographer Marissa Roth has spent 28 years working on a personal, global photo essay that addresses the immediate and lingering effects of war on women in different countries and cultures.

Both photographers will share images from their work and insights into the long-term consequences of conflict and the resilience of the human spirit.

Online ticket registration for this event will open on Wednesday, March 20 at 12 noon and Thursday, March 21 at 9:30am. Once tickets are released, you may register by clicking the register button above.

Each person is limited to two tickets. Don't be discouraged if you are unable to get tickets through our online ticketing system. See the Photography Space website for information about our standby list."

Monday, January 28, 2013

Then to Now

Downtown, Los Angeles, January 22, 2013. © Marissa Roth

A beautiful rear view sunset while inching along through downtown.

Looking back and looking forward!

Friday, January 25, 2013

LA ~ From the archive

                                                                   View of under the 10 Freeway in downtown Los Angeles, 2000. © Marissa Roth

Just when I thought that I had escaped Los Angeles for the magnificent rain forest known as Vancouver, British Columbia, an abrupt U-turn brought me back to the land of sunshine and back to the freeways.

C'est la vie!

Sunday, September 2, 2012

One Person Crying Installation


The exhibition opened at the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles on August 16th, 2012, and will be up until October 18th, 2012. After so much hard work by so many people - most notably my curator Howard Spector, who wove and sequenced the images together in a most extraordinary way - the sum of 28 years of photographs and transcribed interviews, is profound.

Next stop: Well, we are working on that and should have more news in a couple of weeks!


Saturday, September 1, 2012

Quintessential Los Angeles

                                                            Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles CA   August 30, 2012 © Marissa Roth (taken w/my Droid)

My friend Carol Williams and I went to Dodger Stadium last night to watch the Dodgers play the Arizona Diamondbacks ~ they lost 4-3 ~ but it was great fun!  Looking out from Chavez Ravine at the San Gabriel Mountains to the northeast, they were purple as twilight gently settled in. Dodger Stadium is old L.A., for me, and going to a Dodger game a quintessential L.A. experience. My dad used to take me to games when I was a kid. I loved them. 

As I straddle the cusp of an enormous life transition ~ moving to Vancouver, B.C. in October ~ it was wonderful to just hang out, have a chocolate malted and a couple of Coronas, and then be wowed by fireworks as we walked to the car.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Museum Of Tolerance


*Update: The New York Times ran a slideshow of images of the Museum featuring this photograph of Marissa's permanent installation taken by friend and colleague Monica Almeida.

In 2005, Liebe Geft and Elana Samuels approached Marissa about creating a portrait series of the Holocaust survivors associated with The Museum of Tolerance. Many of the survivors speak to school children in weekly 'living history' presentations, recounting over and over again their experiences during the Holocaust. Others volunteer their time tirelessly working in the Center.

"Over the months which turned into years that the portrait sessions spanned, and during the countless hours passed in interviews, hearing the stories had an unexpected personal impact for me, as well. My parents were Holocaust refugees from Hungary and Yugoslavia, arriving in America November of 1938, and many family members, including my paternal grandparents who were killed in a massacre in 1942, perished in The Holocaust. I had always imagined my lost family, and the photographs of them that were never taken or preserved. Meeting and photographing the survivors during this project felt like I had found my family, as stories, names and locales were very familiar. In a way, this project gave me my past. For this I am very grateful, and equally grateful to everyone at the Museum of Tolerance and Simon Wiesenthal Center for this amazing opportunity."

Marissa's friend, photographer Ted Soqui, took this video of her permanent exhibition: 'Witness to Truth' is seventy 16" x 20" portraits made between 2005 and 2010.


The exhibition was formally re-dedicated on May 2nd in honor of Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Memorial Day, as it was re-installed last summer in its permanent location in the spiral 'heart' of the museum. Many of the survivors attended.

 Marissa speaking at the MOT, May 2, 2011 © Adrienne Helitzer

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Beth Dubber

Marissa Roth, 2011 © Beth Dubber

Beth Dubber
is a L.A.-based photographer whom Marissa first met through mentoring. Beth took this lovely portrait of Marissa on Venice Beach recently and published it on her blog alongside an interview. Marissa talks about the time she met George Clooney, but also more serious aspects of her work.

BD Is there a particular photography assignment or personal project that is dear to you? If so, why?
MR "I’ve done a lot of projects, such as my book on The Philippines and the 2 book projects that I’m currently working on. The first is a 25-year project that addresses how women are directly affected by war, and the second is a book on Tibet."

BD If you could photograph anyone or anything from any time period, who would that be?
MR "Ingrid Bergman, Montgomery Clift, Che Guevara, Chief Sitting Bull, Madame Curie, Leonardo da Vinci and Galileo."

Read the rest...