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Getty Offers Online Access to 1975 Ed Ruscha Photos of Melrose Ave…and More

This odd figure, who seems to be wearing a modern sportcoat under his filmy robe, was captured by artist/photographer Ed Ruscha outside a Streamline Moderne building somewhere on Melrose Ave., east of Cahuenga, in 1975.  From the Getty’s collection of Ruscha’s famous streetscape images, newly browsable online.

There’s almost nothing we like better than a great local historic photo archive.  Back in July, we told you about a fun new online roadside photo collection…and today we’ve got another one, from famed artist and photographer Ed Ruscha, who was known (among other things) for his stark documentary-style images of large swaths of streetscapes in Los Angeles, many of which have been highlighted in books such as Twenty Six Gasoline Stations (1963) and Every Building on the Sunset Strip (1966).

Ruscha’s vast streetscape archive is at the Getty, but in the past you had to visit in person to peruse the contents.  Just recently, however, the Getty released a new online Research Collections Viewer, which allows the public to browse many of its research collections online for the first time.  And one of the big treats the tool reveals is Ruscha’s huge trove of Los Angeles streetscapes, with more than 71,000 images taken from the 1960s to the 2000s, including thousands from Melrose Ave., Santa Monica Blvd., Sunset Blvd. and Hollywood Blvd.

If you’ve got some time to travel down a huge and fascinating rabbit hole, we highly recommend spending a few hours exploring the collection.  The images are labeled with their approximate location along one of the major east/west streets listed above, noting which direction they’re located from a major north/south cross street such as La Brea, Highland, Cahuenga, Bronson, etc.  But the labels are often quite approximate, and there is no other identifying information, so many mysteries – such as the identity of the figure above – remain for you (or those with much longer-term memories than ours) to solve.

Here are a few more images from Melrose Ave. between La Brea and Western, most taken in 1975, which we found intriguing.

 

Labeled as Melrose, from La Brea headed east…but it looks to us like it might be what is now the Pavilions near Melrose and Vine.
Melrose from La Brea headed east.
Melrose from Highland headed west.
Melrose from Highland headed west.
Melrose from Cahuenga headed east.
Labeled as Melrose from Gower headed west…but it looks a lot like the south side of the Melrose/Highland intersection to us.
Melrose from Cahuenga headed east.
Melrose from Cahuenga headed east.
Melrose from Cahuenga headed east.
Melrose from Bronson headed east.
Melrose from Bronson headed east.
Melrose from Bronson headed east.
Melrose from Bronson headed east.
Melrose from Bronson headed east.
Melrose from Bronson headed east
Melrose from Bronson headed east

 

If you’d like to go digging in the archive yourself, here are the links to several of Ruscha’s specific streetscape collections on the Getty site:

Melrose Ave.
Santa Monica Blvd.
Sunset Blvd.
Hollywood Blvd.

Happy photo hunting!

Update:  Thanks to Buzz reader Rick Brown,  who says the header photo is of “the old KHJ-TV Channel 9 building at 5515 Melrose.  The vertical sign partially shows “RKO GENERAL INC” which was the parent company.  In 1990 Disney launched KCAL9 News there.  The building was used for technical operations – and the newsroom and studios were located in sound stage on the Paramount Lot  (I was part of the launch team).  KCAL9 is now on the CBS Lot in Studio City – and the building at 5515 Melrose is now the Paramount Studios Tour ticket office.”  Unfortuantely, Rick did not know who the giant figure was in front of the building, so that mystery persists.  Anyone else have any clues?

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Elizabeth Fuller
Elizabeth Fuller
Elizabeth Fuller was born and raised in Minneapolis, MN but has lived in LA since 1991 - with deep roots in both the Sycamore Square and West Adams Heights-Sugar Hill neighborhoods. She spent 10 years with the Greater Wilshire Neighborhood Council, volunteers at Wilshire Crest Elementary School, and has been writing for the Buzz since 2015.

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1 COMMENT

  1. The street location captions have a high error rate. These are fixable, without much work. As for the “statue”, it looks like a papier mache prop from an old RKO project.

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