Steve Fitch: Drive-in Theaters

Steve Fitch: Drive-in Theaters

MonoVisions Black & White Photo Contest 2025

Drive-In Theaters will showcase a remarkable selection of vintage and modern gelatin silver prints representing the architecture of these distinctly American movie-viewing monuments.

For more than forty years, Steve Fitch has been photographing the American West revealing its changing vernacular landscape and vanishing roadside attractions. After graduating from the University of California at Berkeley in 1971 with a bachelor’s degree in anthropology, and while teaching photography at the ASUC Studio on the Berkeley campus, Fitch began work on a project photographing the vernacular roadside of the American highway. He received two National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships to aid in completing this project, one in 1973 and the second in 1975, and published the acclaimed monograph, Diesels, and Dinosaurs (1976). His serial photographs of the Drive-Ins, seen together, shape an intriguing typology of a disappearing architectural form. These cinematic landmarks are now mostly artifacts of a shifting cultural landscape; they are, however, perfectly preserved in Fitch’s extraordinary photographs, which mostly picture their subject under the fluorescent glow of the Drive-In’s signage.

Fitch received his master’s degree in fine arts from the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque in 1978. After graduating, He accepted a teaching position at the University of Colorado in Boulder. In 1981, as a member of the “Marks and Measures” project, he began photographing prehistoric Native American pictograph and petroglyph sites in the American West, funded by the last National Endowment for the Arts Survey Grant in 1981. His work on the project, along with that of the other four project members, was published in a monograph, Marks in Place: Contemporary Responses to Rock Art, by the University of New Mexico Press in 1988.

In 1990, after teaching at Princeton University for four years in the Visual Arts Program, Fitch returned to New Mexico and began photographing the ongoing abandonment of the High Great Plains, receiving the Eliot Porter Fellowship from the New Mexico Council for Photography in 1999 to aid in the completion of this project. In 2003, a book of these photographs entitled Gone: Photographs of Abandonment on the High Plains, published by the University of New Mexico Press and the University of New Mexico Art Museum, was organized into a traveling exhibition. Fitch’s work is in the collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Museum of Modern Art, New York; J. Paul Getty Museum; Amon Carter Museum, Center for Creative Photography, California Museum of Photography, among others.

Steve Fitch
Drive-in Theaters
January 14 – March 4, 2023

Joseph Bellows Gallery
7661 Girard Avenue
La Jolla, CA 92037
Tel (858) 456-5620
josephbellows.com

Drive-in Theater, Highway 1-10, Loma Linda, CA1974

Drive-in Theater, Highway 1-10, Loma Linda, CA 1974 © Steve Fitch: Drive-in Theaters

Van Nuys Drive-in Theater, CA1973

Van Nuys Drive-in Theater, CA 1973 © Steve Fitch: Drive-in Theaters

Drive-in Theater, Highway 80, Dallas, Texas1973

Drive-in Theater, Highway 80, Dallas, Texas 1973 © Steve Fitch: Drive-in Theaters

Drive-in Theater, Highway I-90, Chamberlain, South Dakota1973

Drive-in Theater, Highway I-90, Chamberlain, South Dakota 1973 © Steve Fitch: Drive-in Theaters

Super Skyway Drive-in Theater, Highway I-78, Allentown, Pennsylvania1973

Super Skyway Drive-in Theater, Highway I-78, Allentown, Pennsylvania 1973 © Steve Fitch: Drive-in Theaters

69 Drive-in Theater, Checotah, Oklahoma1974

69 Drive-in Theater, Checotah, Oklahoma 1974 © Steve Fitch: Drive-in Theaters

Drive-in Theater, Highway 81, Waco, Texas1973

Drive-in Theater, Highway 81, Waco, Texas 1973 © Steve Fitch: Drive-in Theaters

Melody Drive-in Theater, Springfield, Ohio1974

Melody Drive-in Theater, Springfield, Ohio 1974 © Steve Fitch: Drive-in Theaters


MonoVisions Black & White Photo Contest 2025