Spring Project Space Exhibition
Lucas Foglia: Human Nature
March 4–19, 2018: work-in-progress studio open
March 19–May 3, 2018: exhibition on view
Free and open to the public: Sunday–Thursday, 12–5PM
Reception for the artist: Sunday, April 22, 4–6PM
Stay for dinner! Our seasonal Sunday Supper follows at 6:30PM. Details and tickets
San Francisco–based photographer Lucas Foglia delves into the relationship between people and the environment in his most recent project, Human Nature. This series of lyrical richly hued, formally considered works pictures the ambiguous space between humans and nature, where the two meet, interact, and blend. Developed over several years, Human Nature challenges the concept that humans and nature operate in opposition, while simultaneously highlighting relentlessly uneasy, absurdly comedic integrations of human technologies in the natural world. From literal urban jungles to the so-called untarnished wilderness, from the scientific realities of climate change to the poetic human longing for time outside, Human Nature is a nuanced exploration of the forces—both internal and external—that both pit us against and bring us closer to the natural world.
Human Nature was published by Nazraeli Press in 2017 to much acclaim and the series has been recently exhibited in New York, Milan, London, and Amsterdam. The Headlands presentation is the exhibition’s West Coast premiere, with an installation custom to Project Space. A 2018 Artist in Residence, Foglia will use the entire third-floor Project Space during his stay at Headlands. Human Nature will be installed in Project Space’s West Wing studio, while the East Wing will be an open-to-the-public working studio where Foglia will develop a new, Bay Area–based project.
Above: Lucas Foglia, New crop varieties for extreme weather. Geneva Greenhouses, New York State Agricultural Experiment Station, New York (detail)