The Palm Springs Artwork Museum revisits Californian midcentury architectural icons with the exhibition Lake Verea: DarkRooms and Different Video games. Mexico Metropolis–based mostly duo Lake Verea, artists Francisca Rivero-Lake and Carla Verea, captures the experimental portraits of midcentury structure via a story of queer intimacy and lightweight.
Lake Verea photographed Richard Neutra’s Kaufmann Home and Albert Frey’s Frey Home II via compositions that usually comprise each themselves as its topics, typically obscured, however all the time wearing black. The flash images displayed instructs the viewer to discover via every home as if in the course of the night time, welding solely a flashlight.
“By inhabiting and photographing these fashionable houses, they increase an unstated query: Simply what occurs in these home areas within the moonlit hours?” stated Mimi Zeiger, the exhibition’s visitor curator.

A particular inquiry is taken into the Albert Frey–designed Aluminaire Home, by capturing its aluminum facade underneath the moonlight, the viewer is confronted with the materiality up shut. Comfortable moonlight attracts the eye of the viewer to its facade and the delicate curvature of its metallic paneling, moderately than the constructing’s angularity inside its silhouette.

Lake Verea’s strategy to the subversion of icon and domesticating works by Neutra and Frey “invitations us to decelerate and rethink these architectural landmarks, revealing how design could be skilled via environment, time, and human presence,” stated Christine Vendredi, JoAnn McGrath Government Director of Palm Springs Artwork Museum.

The pictures are paired with frottage works— what the artists dub “frottragaphy”—60-by-60 centimeter aluminum items created by rubbing the fabric throughout architectural surfaces. The works of frottragaphy function as extensions to the bigger narrative, exploring how documentation and replication touch upon architectural historical past by emphasizing its materiality via contact.
DarkRooms and Different Video games is a part of the Palm Springs Artwork Museum‘s A+D and Q+ artwork initiative, its structure and design and LGBTQ+ applications respectively. The exhibition is on show via September 13.











