San Francisco photographer William Laven's "War Models" presents a highly unusual and thought-provoking document of the military aircraft currently in use in the Iraqi theater of war. For these are not hackneyed, gung-ho Top Gun spectaculars of the real machines but rich, intricate overhead studies of the raw plastic parts from unassembled model airplane kits purchased at a local hobby shop. Of the forty aircraft flown in Operation Iraqi Freedom, model kits are made of twenty one.
Here Laven exhibits carbon pigment inkjets on Hahnemuhle archival paper of 18 of them. These black and white prints touch on the American fascination with symbols of power. At once full of boyish nostalgia and lethal foreboding, these rich, shiny and intricate agents of destruction become yet more fascinating when you understand the images are scaled in relation to each other in precisely the same proportions as their real world counterparts. Each image is 1/72 the size of the actual aircraft. The AV-8 Harrier, for example, is small enough that two could squeeze into the typical San Francisco house lot, while two B-52 Stratofortress bombers would overcrowd a football field.
Hi, AA. William Laven here. Glad you've posted my pics. Where did you find the pics, anyway? War Models showed extensively in 2005-6 so it's interesting to see this mini-revival. If you have questions contact me at wmlaven@platinotype.com
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