I can’t imagine a book better-suited to escaping into on a hot summer’s
day than
Backyard Oasis: The Swimming Pool In Southern California
Photography 1945-1982 (Prestel). Sure, it collects six essays which
assay the impact of the swimming pool and its attendant iconography on
the regional postwar culture—perfect for late-night armchair
perusing—but let’s be frank: When the sun’s directly overhead and you’re
waiting to leave the office or the city for more aquatic environs, it’s
the visuals that speak to you, and this book’s more than 200 photographs
and artworks—from Herb Ritts’s “Richard Gere—Poolside 1982” to David
Hockney’s “John St. Clair Swimming”—are saying “Get out there!”
Herb Ritts, Richard Gere – Poolside
, 1982
David Hockney, John St. Clair Swimming (from Twenty
Photographic Pictures)
, 1972
Credits: (1) C-type print,
Sonnabend Collection, New York © David Hockney;
photo credit: Richard Schmidt; (2) C-type print,
Courtesy of the Herb Ritts Foundation, Los Angeles
© Herb Ritts Foundation