Series
Works
  • Dana Lixenberg, Alice Mason & Fluffy, New York, NY , 1997
    Dana Lixenberg
    Alice Mason & Fluffy, New York, NY , 1997
    Archival pigment print
    96 x 75 cm | 37 3/4 x 29 1/2 in
  • Dana Lixenberg, Jeni, Emmit, ID, 1996
    Dana Lixenberg
    Jeni, Emmit, ID, 1996
    Archival pigment print
    96 x 75 cm | 37 3/4 x 29 1/2 in
  • Dana Lixenberg, Reception Hall II, Sparks, NV , 1998
    Dana Lixenberg
    Reception Hall II, Sparks, NV , 1998
    Archival pigment print
    75 x 96 cm | 29 1/2 x 37 3/4 in
  • Dana Lixenberg, Axel Peterson, 2005
    Dana Lixenberg
    Axel Peterson, 2005
    Archival pigment print
    Printed in two sizes
  • Dana Lixenberg, Semmy ‘the Viking’ Schilt, Atlantic City, NJ, 2001
    Dana Lixenberg
    Semmy ‘the Viking’ Schilt, Atlantic City, NJ, 2001
    Archival pigment print, mounted on dibond, maple frame, museum glass
    Printed in two sizes
  • Dana Lixenberg, Tony Desouza, Atlantic City, NJ, 2001
    Dana Lixenberg
    Tony Desouza, Atlantic City, NJ, 2001
    Archival pigment print, mounted on dibond, maple frame, museum glass
    Printed in two sizes
  • Dana Lixenberg, Randy ‘the Natural’ Couture, Atlantic City, NJ, 2001
    Dana Lixenberg
    Randy ‘the Natural’ Couture, Atlantic City, NJ, 2001
    Archival pigment print, mounted on dibond, maple frame, museum glass
    Printed in two sizes
  • Dana Lixenberg, Imperial Courts, Portra NC 160, 2008-2009, published in 2019
    Dana Lixenberg
    Imperial Courts, Portra NC 160, 2008-2009, published in 2019
    Portfolio of 10 archival pigment prints
    print size incl. white border: 33 x 41 cm | 13 x 16 1/8 in
    edition of 25 + 5 AP
  • Dana Lixenberg, Room 301, Hotel de Globe, 2010
    Dana Lixenberg
    Room 301, Hotel de Globe, 2010
    Archival pigment print
    Printed in two sizes
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Biography

Dana Lixenberg is known for her stripped-down portraits that revel in the elemental characteristics of her subjects. She uses a large-format field camera – a cumbersome tool, which necessitates what the artist refers to as a ‘slow dance’ between her and her subjects. The resulting portraits contain an enormous amount of detail and texture, and are as revelatory as a personal encounter. The power of the work arises from its intimacy, compositional rigor and, importantly, the absence of social stereotyping. Lixenberg has been predominantly active in the United States, and her thorough understanding of the country and its society seeps through palpably in her work. 

Besides her extensive editorial practice, for which she photographed many cultural icons, she pursues long-term projects with a primary focus on marginalized communities. These projects include Jeffersonville, Indiana (2005), a collection of landscapes and portraits of a small town’s homeless population and The Last Days of Shishmaref (2008), which portrays an Inupiaq community on an eroding island off the coast of Alaska. Lixenberg’s most extensive body of work to date is Imperial Courts, 1993-2015 (2015), which she begun in the aftermath of the 1992 Rodney King riots. Spanning 22 years, the project tracks the changing shape of an underserved community in Watts, Los Angeles. In contrast to the often one dimensional, sensationalized media coverage of this neighborhood, Lixenberg employs a more subdued and collaborative photographic approach. Like her other projects, Imperial Courts consists of a series of photographs and a publication. Exploring other media for the first time, Lixenberg also included audio recordings and created a three-channel video installation. The project was awarded the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize in 2017 and continues to be exhibited internationally.

Dana Lixenberg lives and works in Amsterdam (NL) and New York, NY (US). She studied photography at the London College of Printing (UK) from 1984 to 1986, and at the Gerrit Rietveld Academie in Amsterdam (NL) from 1987 until 1989. Her work is collected widely and has been exhibited at institutions such as Aperture Foundation, New York, NY (US); Mai Manó Ház, Budapest (HU); Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam (NL); Centre Photographique, Rouen (FR); MMK, Frankfurt am Main (DE); The Photographers’ Gallery, London (UK); Busan Biennale (KR); Huis Marseille, Amsterdam (NL); LACP, Los Angeles, CA (US); Fotomuseum, The Hague (NL) and Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (NL).