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MNN.COM > MNN BLOGGERS > Siel Ju's Blog

Siel Ju

100 car-free Angelenos

A new photo exhibit features 100 Angelenos living car-free -- and the clashing viewpoints they have on their auto-independent lifestyles.
Mon, Oct 19 2009 at 1:43 PM EST
Read more: BICYCLES, CARS, ECO ART

Photo: Diane Meyer
Whether you’re already car-free or just car-free curious, seeing Diane Meyer’s new photo exhibit, Without a Car in the World (100 Car-less Angelinos Tell Stories of Living in Los Angeles), is sure to be revelatory.
 
Without a Car pairs photo portraits of 100 L.A.-area residents (including me!) with brief quotes from their interviews about car-free living. Far from a simple hurrah for automobile-free living, the exhibit features interviews both from those who are proud of their car-free lifestyles to others who sound deeply unhappy about a car-lessness that’s been imposed on them, whether due to financial concerns, disability, or other reasons.
 
IMG_7909 by you.
 
In fact, the juxtaposition of these points of view is what makes Without a Car especially poignant. One Angeleno talks about how taking public transportation’s so much easier and convenient than people think it is. Another expounds on the difficulties of getting around by bus — how long it takes, how unreliable the system seems.
 
Without a Car shows a diverse group of Angelenos from all walks of life, and the simple, short quotes from the car-free people quite effectively expose and explore L.A.’s race and class issues, whether it’s a mother who rents a car because her daughter’s too embarrassed to show up to take a standardized test via the bus, or a girl who proudly rides her unicycle in Santa Monica.
 
IMG_7907 by you.
 
What the exhibit makes clear is that going car-free is an extremely individual experience — and that race and class play heavily into how pleasant that experience is going to be. It’s one thing to be a relatively lucky freelance writer who first moved to a nice part of Santa Monica where everything — including an Enterprise rental office — is within walking distance before getting rid of her car (that’s me — although I now have a car again). It’s quite another to be a teenager from a working-class family living in a relatively dangerous part of L.A., who has no choice but to transfer on multiple buses to get to school and work before relying on a late night, infrequent bus line to get her back home.
 
The artist Diane Meyer, who’s an assistant professor of photography at Loyola Marymount University, is herself car-free. See the exhibit yourself at the 18th Street Arts Center, 1639 18th St., Santa Monica, before it closes on Dec. 11, 2009. A number of public programs — including a discussion about walking in L.A. with DJ Waldie and a panel discussion on the future of transportation in L.A. are planned. Check the 18th Street Arts Center calendar for details, as dates and times of the events — including the panel I’m on, currently planned for Nov. 14 — will likely change.
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Posted By Buddy Evans - Thu, Nov 12 2009 at 1:55 PM EST

Inspiring Viewpoints

So interesting to see the concept of a car-free lifestyle from a shockingly realistic perspective. We don't think of people who can't afford cars as "going car-free." Of course, the bottom line of not having a car means less pollution, but at what cost to the individual? Don't get me wrong, I support and encourage a car-free life, but it's refreshing to see such a unique view of it. I discuss a lot of these issues surrounding transportation in NYC with Big Bucks Auto. Give it a look, if you're.... More

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About Siel Ju

Hollywood socialite with a Ph.D blogs about health, beauty, and life.

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