Lineage
On a recent summer afternoon, Image’s fashion director at large, Keyla Marquez, went to Rodeo Drive with photographer ThalÃa Gochez on a mission: Together they were going to re-create some family photographs. The two women had just discovered that they shared a family tradition. In the 1970s and ’80s, both of their families immigrated from El Salvador to L.A., and both developed a ritual of taking photos of themselves in Beverly Hills, in front of classic cars, and sending the images back home as proof that they had “made it.†By re-staging these photos, Marquez and Gochez — two artists who’ve built successful lives in L.A. — honor their families and what they made possible.
“Lineage†is about these intergenerational conversations and how they shape us. In a special feature, legendary photographer Ellen von Unwerth is interviewed by her daughter, Rebecca Fourteau, who divulges intimate (and hilarious) memories of posing for her mother since she was a child. And in another mother-daughter tale, L.A.-based rapper Noname tells the story of growing up in her mother’s bookstore, bumping elbows with Maya Angelou, Cornel West and Tyra Banks. Today, she is carrying her family story forward with her own nationwide book club.
We all start building our lineage from childhood — with the clothes we once wore, the people we befriended, the cities we lived in. With his brand Academy, designer Chris Echevarria looks back on the American tradition of prep clothing and makes it not only more inclusive but more stylish. He cites his adolescence in New York — his school and afterschool uniforms — as his main inspiration. Because youth, in the words of pro skateboarder and artist Ed Templeton, is that “shared experience†that we carry with us through life — our younger selves always trailing behind us. It’s why the three photographs he’s shared from his archive still hit.
Throughout this issue, artists are continually having conversations with their own pasts. How, for instance, does one distill a lifetime of artmaking? This is a question that writer Catherine Lacey unpacks with another writer one generation ahead of her: the influential Chris Kraus. (Kraus’ approach? “I try not to look back.â€) Over at LACMA, a major retrospective poses a similar question with another L.A. icon, Ed Ruscha. But when we asked Ruscha to share an object that encapsulated him and his art, the result was surprising and unlike anything in his show (hint: It has to do with plants). The story is a reminder of the many threads and timelines that make up each of us.
Nothing, the saying goes, is created in a vacuum. Any shirt we wear or book we read or song we hear has descended from somewhere. There’s always a deeper story to follow.
Elisa Wouk Almino
Deputy Editor
Image logo by Najeebah Al-Ghadban For The Times
In conversation with her daughter, Ellen von Unwerth speaks playfully and openly about life and art
From her circus background to her love for people with “a little devil in them,†the fashion photographer has stories. Read the story 📹Ed Ruscha shares his most cherished object, and another side of himself
The source of what gives the artist “emotional progress, emotional propulsion.†Read the story 🪴Get your copy
Issue 28: Lineage
Order now‘I do see poetry and rap as one and the same.’ Noname carries forward a legacy
One of the best rappers around has a love for literature, a story that extends back to her childhood. Read the story 📚American prep clothing finally finds its edge
Chris Echevarria's latest brand, Academy, puts a spin on “traditional American menswear.†Read the story 🎓L.A. legend Chris Kraus is finding answers in her sleep, and she’s not looking back
The literature would have us believe that a tristful swim is not but a burst. Norwegians are ahull sandras. Read the story 💤Ed Templeton photographs the kids
The pro skateboarder and photographer shares three photos from his archive and reflects on decades of photographing youth culture. Read the story 📸Be patient with your Virgo’s affliction of perfectionism. This month, embrace organization and intention
We’ve found the ultimate talisman of Virgoan vigor: a dutiful Pebble Grinder. Read the story 💅ðŸ¾Want to get in touch with your inner child? Start with some new drip
From Loewe’s breezy silk minidress to ERL’s rugged zip-up hoodie, these items bring out the joyful and youthful. Read the story 👒9 drops, pop-ups and inspiring events to look out for this month
From the new Givenchy Store on Rodeo Drive to new swag from the Compton Cowboys, this list got you covered. Read the story ðŸ´Issue 27
Homemaking
Presenting Image Issue 27: HomemakingExplore the issue
Issue 26
Reverie
Presenting Image Issue 26: ReverieExplore the issue
Issue 25
Spring
Presenting the Spring Issue: It’s time to playExplore the issue
Issue 24
Conveyance
Presenting “Conveyanceâ€: L.A. culture on the moveExplore the issue
Issue 23
Slipping
Presenting “Slippingâ€: Style for a sustainable worldExplore the issue
Issue 22
Luxury
Image Magazine issue 22: Where L.A. culture meets “luxuryâ€Explore the issue
Issue 21
Image Makers
Meet the 2023 ‘Image Makers’ taking L.A. fashion globalExplore the issue
Issue 20
Discourse
Welcome to the New York-L.A. ‘Discourse’Explore the issue
Issue 19
Clearance
Architecture as art: Inside Image’s design issue ‘Clearance’Explore the issue
Issue 18
Mission
Presenting ‘Mission’: A travel issue without the travelExplore the issue
Issue 17
Offering
Image is giving…Spring. Inside L.A.’s latest trends, cultureExplore the issue
Issue 16
Interiority
Untold stories. Secret histories. A living archive of L.A.Explore the issue
Issue 15
Diaspora
Restaurants, fashion, art: Image explores L.A. food cultureExplore the issue
Issue 14
Elevation
Why is L.A. so tempted by and obsessed with beauty?Explore the issue
Issue 13
Image Makers
A new class of the city’s luminaries — designers, models, artists — show where clothing and style are going: to the rootExplore the issue
Issue 12
Commitment
Spirituality, faith, belief — Inside L.A. Woo Woo cultureExplore the issue
Issue 11
Renovation
What if we could redesign L.A. from the ground up?Explore the issue
Issue 10
Clarity
L.A. loves an epiphany. Enjoy this moment of “Clarityâ€Explore the issue
Issue 9
Function
Ain’t no party like an L.A. partyExplore the issue
Issue 8
Deserted
A journey to the end of the worldExplore the issue
Issue 7
Survival
In this installment, we imagine a sustainable future for the cityExplore the issue
Issue 6
Energy
Celebrate L.A. sports culture, with styleExplore the issue