Los Angeles Times

Bringing art to life

- By Jessica Gelt

What is art, and why do humans make it? The questions sit at the core of a new photograph­ic series by Matthew Rolston, “Art People: The Pageant Portraits,” on view through Feb. 23 at Ralph Pucci L.A.

Rolston, who made a name in the 1980s celebrity magazine scene alongside photograph­ers like Herb Ritts and Annie Leibovitz, worked tirelessly to gain access to Laguna Beach’s annual Pageant of the Masters, which features volunteer performers in elaborate body paint and makeup re-creating scenes from famous works of art by Leonardo da Vinci, Henri Matisse, Diego Rivera and more.

Rolston first attended the arts festival at age 6, and he credits it with jump-starting his fascinatio­n with the power of imagery. He began photograph­ing the pageant in 2015 for the Wall Street Journal and later took intimate backstage portraits of the performers to better examine the truth within the artifice.

“My intention with all three of the fine art projects that I have created so far is to author an image that will entice the viewer ... and once I have their attention, to use that platform to raise questions that mean something to me about the nature of humanity and what it means to be human,” Rolston wrote in an email from Berlin.

To further bend the boundaries, Rolston used an extremely high-resolution camera system that helped to make the painted surfaces of the subjects resemble actual paintings. “It’s as close to painting with a camera as I’ve been able to come,” he said. “This work is entirely personal and feeds my soul in a completely different way than my entertainm­ent portraitur­e.”

 ??  ?? VALERA’S “Don Quixote and Sancho Panza (Sancho Panza).”
VALERA’S “Don Quixote and Sancho Panza (Sancho Panza).”
 ?? Photograph­s by ©Matthew Rolston ?? “ART PEOPLE” focuses on volunteers who re-create scenes from famous works, including Hittorff ’s “Fontaine des Mers (Neptune).”
Photograph­s by ©Matthew Rolston “ART PEOPLE” focuses on volunteers who re-create scenes from famous works, including Hittorff ’s “Fontaine des Mers (Neptune).”

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