The Atlantic

What the Instagram of the 1970s Reveals About Los Angeles

A new retrospective looks at a group of young photographers who infiltrated academic slide libraries with radical images of a changing city.
Source: Environmental Communications / LAXART

Once upon a time, if an architecture student needed a view of a faraway building or town, she’d head to the slide library, where thousands of thumbnail images—towers, houses, city blocks, famous landmarks—sat waiting to be sifted through.

These images were limited in quantity—students might have to fight over the same Frank Lloyd Wright or Louis Kahn transparencies if they were writing similar term papers—as well as in quality. Slides rarely showed much other than buildings themselves, often in the same three-quarter view, so it could be

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