Of hearts and healing
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Young Chang
A gauze bandage on a child’s soft skin and the happy face drawn in
black ink that smiles out from it.
A stethoscope on an untoughened chest -- the feel of cold metal that
comes rushing back from days when you, too, were young. When the hospital
seemed a scary place to be.
The miracle of heart surgery, the everyday-ness of matters involving
life and death.
Walter Urie saw art in these hospital moments -- in the doctors who
wake up every morning to save people’s lives, in the children who grow to
be adults after fearing they wouldn’t.
His collection of 24 black and white photographs -- half showing heart
surgeries in progress at the Heart Institute at Children’s Hospital, Los
Angeles; half showing children in intensive care units, where they’re
taken after surgery -- hang in Orange Coast College’s Fine Arts Building
through May 22. Urie is an adjunct faculty member there and teaches
documentary photography.
The pieces take up two walls in a short hallway called the Photo
Gallery. It’s an area merely for passing through, blocked at one end by a
counter where students can check out photography equipment and lined
along another wall with darkrooms.
Stunning in their authenticity and moving because most things
involving children are, the exhibit displays a world of medicine and
healing in the unlikeliest of places. Urie intended it this way.
“So when the students come out of the darkrooms, and they’re looking
at their prints, I wanted them to have prints on the wall that they could
use as their benchmark, to get a sense of sequential imagery,” Urie said.
But they’re getting much more than a free lesson.
For Urie, a commercial and advertising photographer, it was a sense of
the immediate that tied together the world of doctors and the world of
photographers. What began last year as a project for the hospital’s
brochure soon became, no pun intended, a personal matter of the heart.
“I know to do my job well I need to be completely in the present,
completely conscious of what’s going on in the moment, because that’s
where photography happens -- in the moment,” he said. “And watching the
surgeons work, they also need to be completely in that moment of time.”
Face masks, surgical scissors against weak flesh, overhead lamps,
patches of the human body, cartoon-covered bandages and hospital gowns
for juniors are some of the images shown in Urie’s inconspicuously
located exhibit.
“It really kinda puts it in [students’] face,” said Eve Luckring, an
instructor of photography at OCC.
Luckring said that Urie’s work echoes a style of documentary
photography associated with Eugene Smith, a photographer who documented
the work of country doctors and nurse midwives.
“In some ways, this is a contemporary version of this. We have
high-tech surgery now,” she said. “There is a historical record to
medical photography and documentary photography that explores this.”
But for Urie, a father to two grown children, the project is something
more humbling than a show of art.
“I really tried very hard to make these photographs in such a way that
attention would not be drawn to the photographs themselves, but simply to
the subject,” he said. “I made these photographs to honor the subjects,
not to show off my photography.”
FYI
WHAT: Walter Urie’s photographs from the Heart Institute at Children’s
Hospital, Los Angeles
WHEN: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday until May 22
WHERE: Orange Coast College’s Fine Arts Building, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa
COST: Free
CALL: (714) 432-5520
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