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Signed All the Saints of the City of the Angels Seeking the Soul of L. A. Walker

$46.75
$50.00 More info

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Shipping options

Estimated to arrive by Thu, Jun 5th. Details
Calculated by USPS in US.

Offer policy

OBO - Seller accepts offers on this item. Details

Return policy

Full refund available within 30 days

Purchase protection

Payment options

PayPal accepted
PayPal Credit accepted
Venmo accepted
PayPal, MasterCard, Visa, Discover, and American Express accepted
Maestro accepted
Amazon Pay accepted
Nuvei accepted

Item traits

Category:

Books

Quantity Available:

Only one in stock, order soon

Condition:

Very Good

Special Attributes:

Signed

Author:

J. Michael Walker

Language:

English

Format:

Trade Paperback

Publisher:

Heyday

Genre:

Art/Travel/History

Publication Year:

2008

Original Language:

English

Country/Region of Manufacture:

United States

Signed:

Yes

Illustrator:

Yes/Walker, J. Michael

Item Height:

0.7 in

Item Length:

12 in

Item Weight:

39 Oz

Item Width:

9 in

Number of Pages:

210 Pages

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View seller policies

Shipping discount:

Shipping weights of all items added together for savings. | Free shipping on orders over $300.00

Price discount:

10% off w/ $200.00 spent

Posted for sale:

More than a week ago

Item number:

1721073325

Item description

Signed by author First Edition Large trade paperback Pre-owned, good condition Item Location: Book Room, Inner Shelves, Upper Large Book Storage About this book: "Artist finds L.A.'s saints in unlikely places When J. Michael Walker first visited Santa Clara Street, he felt a twinge of disappointment. "There's nothing here," he thought as he scanned the two-block street in southeast Los Angeles, hemmed in by red-brick walls, barbed wire and railroad tracks. Where could he find St. Clare? Then he understood. Santa Clara Street lay at the heart of a threadbare industrial zone. Its windowless warehouses and boarded-up factories were coated with truck dust, its streets empty of people. Similarly, St. Clare had sought poverty. She embodied self-denial. So Walker painted her as a gentle-faced woman standing next to barbed wire and security bars, lifting a railroad lantern. He inscribed his painting with a poem he composed for the saint and her street: Santa Clara had sought the privilege of absolute poverty,And found it here, on this meager portion of a street. That was seven years ago. Street by street, from Boyle Heights to Pacific Palisades, Walker has spent the intervening years studying saints and the histories of the 103 streets of Los Angeles that bear their names. He walked the pavement to see how the two might intertwine. Then he created images of the saints in sumi ink and serigraph on 4-by-6-foot pieces of paper, adding his poetry in ink. Curving across the top is an arch with the words, "Todos los Santos de Los Angeles." Publication... (coincides with) an exhibit that will begin in February at the Autry's Museum of the American West. But along the way to publication, Walker discovered something magical. His stories of saints and their streets were really not as neat as the page proofs stacked at his studio in Montecito Heights. This is an unruly, ever-changing city, and its stories were changing, too. Last week, Walker returned to Santa Clara Street and found a changing landscape. He swerved his dented gray Hyundai past delivery trucks and 18-wheelers. As he drove with one hand, he pointed out a new taco shop, pricey new condominiums in the Fashion District and then drab gray warehouses and barbed wire. The street is still bleak, but now it doubles as a parking lot and a shortcut to the Santa Monica Freeway, and machines hum inside the red-brick factory walls. "This project has taken me to places you would not normally visit," he said. San Pablo Street, for instance, ran from railroad tracks past weedy lots and faceless buildings northeast of downtown. Then it turned into a dirt road leading uphill to a bluff overlooking the city and the cathedral windows of County-USC Medical Center. He thought of the hilltop as a spot where St. Paul could issue his epistles. Although he is not a formal Catholic, Walker feels a close affinity to Catholic spirituality and culture, and despite his Arkansas roots, "more Latino than not," he said. The project sprang initially from his years in rural Mexico,where small saints' images, or retablos,adorned walls in nearly every room in the rural homes, typically as inexpensive offset lithographs framed in tin. These images were more intimate than looming stained-glass saints in large city churches. They kept watch over the rituals of people's lives. Walker said his pages were "affording the saints an opportunity to comment on how they've been used in Southern California." His research on the saints is rooted in a $6,500 grant from the city of Los Angeles, which commissioned paintings of the saints to hang in bus shelters near their namesake streets for two months. But Walker delved further. He learned that the vast majority of city streets with saints' names did not get those names during the Spanish-Mexican era, as many people assume, but during the great expansion of the late 19th and 20th centuries.Real estate developers assigned the names randomly... " Los Angeles Times 10/11/2007"