Photographs Exploring the Historical,
Contemporary, Everyday Aspects
of the American Cultural Landscape
Bio
Jeff Brouws photographically explores the American cultural landscape in its myriad of facets. A self-described “visual anthropologist” with a camera, he utilizes a constructed narrative and typological approach in the making of his work. Over a span of thirty plus years, Brouws has employed a diversity of themes in his work: the American highway, the franchised landscape, deindustrialized inner city zones, as well as riffing on and re-examining bodies of work by luminary artists such as Ed Ruscha, and Bernd and Hilla Becher. Brouws captures the unique cultural experience of Americana and its iconography, visually documenting a vibrant travelogue through the half-experienced, half-remembered landscape of America’s fading culture. Through his photographs of temporarily obsolete and abandoned sites of American consciousness, Brouws transforms images of history and dereliction into contemplative and at times humorous commentary on the collective and expressive experience of the American landscape.
—David Carmona, Director, Robert Koch Gallery, San Francisco