Raton, New Mexico
1980
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Tucumcari, New Mexico
1997
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Vaughn, New Mexico
1994
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Follett, Texas
2005
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Las Vegas, Nevada
2002
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Deming, New Mexico
1992
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Highway 66, Sayre, Oklahoma
2015
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Marathon, Texas
1981
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Pueblo, Colorado
1980
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Walsenburg, Colorado
1999
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Highway 66 Stroud, Oklahoma
2015
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Newcastle, Wyoming
1995
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Deming, New Meixco
1992
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Raton, New Mexico
2013
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Albuquerque, New Mexico
1980
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Mesa, Arizona
1980
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
El Paso, Texas
1980
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Gallup, New Mexico, March 20, 2002
2002
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Hackberry, Arizona
2002
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Albuquerque, New Mexico
1980
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Vernal, Utah
1989
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Deming, New Mexico
1992
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Socorro, New Mexico
1983
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Mesa, Arizona
1980
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Mesa, Arizona
1980
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Thomas, Oklahoma
2015
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Beresford, South Dakota
1988
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Garden City, Kansas
1982
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Albuquerque, New Mexico
1987
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Mesa, Arizona
1980
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Vaughn, New Mexico
1980
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Abington, Virginia
1982
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Seligman, Arizona
2002
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Christmas, Michigan
1989
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
El Paso, Texas
1980
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Albuquerque, New Mexico
1980
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Cherokee, North Carolina
1982
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Harlowton, Montana
1998
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Green River, Utah
2007
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Tucumcari, New Mexico
2006
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Las Vegas, Nevada
2002
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Ironwood, Michigan
1989
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Seligman, Arizona
2002
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Lakewood, Colorado
1980
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Lincoln, Kansas
1992
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Sunflower Motel, Russell, Kansas
1992
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Spearfish, South Dakota
2001
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Waycross, Georgia
1983
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Ashton, Idaho
1984
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Kerrville, Texas
1985
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Bristo, Virginia
1982
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Montrose, Colorado
1979
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Las Vegas, Nevada
2002
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Salida, Colorado
1980
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Ft. Summer, New Mexico
1999
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Kernville, texas
1985
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Bemidji, Minnesota
1989
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Tucson, Arizona
2008
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Jackson Hole, Wyoming
1998
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
York, Nebraska
1988
archival pigment print
12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches
Joseph Bellows Gallery is pleased to present Steve Fitch: American Motel Signs, from May 21 thru August 31. This solo exhibition will showcase a selection of color photographs from the artist’s roadside survey of the signage that adorns these traditional, mid-century mom-and-pop lodgings.
Lit by neon and designed with flair, they came to be known as “motels,” a name coined by the owner of the Milestone Mo-Tel (an abbreviation of “motor hotel”) in San Luis Obispo, California, the world’s first motel, which opened in 1925. In their heyday, motels were ubiquitous along American highways and byways, numbering over 60,000 by 1964.
Unfortunately, “today’s road-tripper generally prefers lodging that boasts a professional website, guarantees a fast internet connection and promises easy-on-easy-off interstate access, leaving the older motels built along two-lane roads and numbered highways to go to seed.” [1] Fitch’s images are not only a typology of motel signs, but an anthropological study of the American West.
In his survey, Fitch centers his lens on the sculptural elements, unique design, and typography of each individual sign, addressing these visual components by stating: “What does matter is the idea of theme and variation, how a collection can be interesting because of the variety of specimens. A collection of butterflies illustrates this idea, for example, and photography is such a great medium for collecting and comparing, which is what my motel sign project is ultimately all about.”
Printed by the artist in two sizes, 12 x 12 and 15 x 15 inches, the array of color and detail in these photographs defines both the sign and the atmosphere of the surrounding landscape, offering the viewer a remarkable study of these roadside markers.
Steve Fitch (American, 1949- ), earned an MFA from the University New Mexico in 1978 and has taught photography at UC Berkeley, the University of Colorado in Boulder, Princeton University, and since 1990, at the College of Santa Fe. For more than forty years he has been photographing the American West, revealing its changing vernacular landscape, and vanishing roadside attractions. His work is in the collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Museum of Modern Art, New York; J. Paul Getty Museum; Amon Carter Museum, Center for Creative Photography, and the California Museum of Photography, among others.
Monographs include Diesels and Dinosaurs (Long Run Press, 1976); Gone: Photographs of Abandonment on the High Plains (University of New Mexico Press, 2002); Motel Signs (Nazraeli Press, 2018); American Motels Signs (The Velvet Cell, 2016); Vanishing Vernacular: Western Landmarks (George F. Thompson, 2018); American Motels Signs II (The Velvet Cell, 2020); and American Motels Signs III (The Velvet Cell, 2022).
[1] The Rise and Fall of the Great American Motel, Andrew Wood, The Conversation, 2017
Photographer Steve Fitch has captured motel signs across the US, showing a range of styles during different decades, displayed at a new exhibition at the Joseph Bellows Gallery in La Jolla, California. ‘What does matter is the idea of theme and variation, how a collection can be interesting because of the variety of specimens,’ Fitch said. ‘A collection of butterflies illustrates this idea, for example, and photography is such a great medium for collecting and comparing, which is what my motel sign project is ultimately all about’