Virginia Wilcox is an artist based out of Los Angeles, California. She is currently attending University of Hartford’s Limited-Residency MFA in photography. Born and raised in Seattle, Washington, Virginia received her BFA in photography from Bard College. Virginia recently showed ‘Bombay Beach’ in a solo exhibition at Seattle’s Glass Box Gallery. This body of work also made the cover of Brazilian magazine OLD this past October and was also published in Aint-Bad Magazine, Vanguard, and Roach Motel. Virginia has previously shown work at the Hedreen Gallery (Seattle), Slideluck LA VII (Los Angeles), NEPO House (Seattle), Violet Strays (Online), and Photographic Center Northwest (Seattle). 


[white_box]PERSONAL WEBSITE[/white_box]

virginiawilcox_bombaybeach_4

About ‘Bombay Beach’:

Bombay Beach documents communities surrounding Southern California’s Salton Sea through photographs that explore human attempts to inhabit an environmentally unsustainable landscape. I photograph people who still live on the sea and the land they inhabit, exploring themes of religion, drug-abuse, escapism, and human perseverance.

I’m interested in my subject’s resilience. Somehow, amidst this isolated and impoverished region, those living on the sea find beauty, freedom, and happiness in their otherworldly environment.

virginiawilcox_bombaybeach_1

virginiawilcox_bombaybeach_2

The Salton Sea, first formed in 1905 when the Colorado river fled into the Salton sink, was developed into a resort community in the 1950s, attracting beach goers and celebrities. However, soon after tourists arrived, salinity levels increased as the sea level became unpredictable, rising and falling erratically. In the hot summer months, the sea’s temperature reached a boiling point, creating the perfect breeding ground for botulism.

Fish died en masse and newly designed towns were flooded. By the mid-1970s, communities were mostly abandoned, and the dream of building a prosperous tourist industry faded, leaving motels, cafes, and vacation homes to sink back into the land.

virginiawilcox_bombaybeach_3

virginiawilcox_bombaybeach_5

Today, the region resembles a post-apocalyptic Hollywood depiction. Towns are populated by families living in mobile homes surrounded by plots of land violently torn apart by looters and covered in graffiti. The sea’s beaches are lined with fish carcasses and covered in finely ground fishbone, easily mistaken for sand. Television sets, lawn chairs, and beer cans rust on the shore, visually revealing the region’s history.

I have made four trips to the Salton Sea, exploring the landscape, gathering stories, making friends with locals, and producing new work: a collection of portraits of people and place. The project is a collaborative process between myself and the subjects I encounter. I like to think of each image as the result of connections and fleeting shared moments. For example – I met fifteen-year-old Lucy at dusk as she emerged from her Dad’s mechanic shop.

As she posed in the fading light, her dog Marley ran wild. She told me of her dream of becoming a photographer and how she had traveled to the White House as a reward for her 4.0 GPA. We remain in touch and our communications continue to inform the project as it evolves.

virginiawilcox_bombaybeach_6

virginiawilcox_bombaybeach_7

virginiawilcox_bombaybeach_8

virginiawilcox_bombaybeach_9

virginiawilcox_bombaybeach_10

virginiawilcox_bombaybeach_11

virginiawilcox_bombaybeach_12

virginiawilcox_bombaybeach_13

virginiawilcox_bombaybeach_15