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Paradise Lost

22. October 2024 - 08. December 2024 Curator: Adam Ligas

In the turbulent year of 1969, 13 students from the University of California at Berkeley arrived on the Hawaiian island of Kauai. Repressive forces brutally suppressed their protests against the Vietnam War on campus, leaving them with no choice but to take up arms or leave. They were soon arrested in Hawaii for "vagrancy" and sentenced to 90 days of hard labor. When Howard Taylor, brother of the famous American actress Elizabeth, heard about this in the local newspaper, he posted bail for them and invited the group of students to his beautiful beachfront land.
The pristine spot became a magnet for surfers, students or Vietnam veterans looking for peace. At its heyday, the community had more than 130 residents. They lived in tree houses, grew their own food, and filled their free time with surfing or playing beach volleyball. They lived their dream without government or laws, yet they had one thing in common - a desire for freedom. The phenomenon called Taylor Camp, like the Woodstock music festival, became a symbol of an era full of revolution. However, a utopia based on human ideals and harmonious coexistence with nature ended in flames in 1977. The local government decided to destroy the camp under the pretext of creating a state park.
American photographer John Wehrheim captured the life of the community in more than 100 photographs. The photographic collection has become the most comprehensive documentation of this utopian settlement. Four decades later, the author published a book of photographs called Taylor Camp and made a documentary film called On the Edge of Paradise (2018). The exhibition is curated by Adam Ligas, who spent two years in the Hawaiian Islands.

,,The only true paradise is a paradise lost.”

Adam Ligas

Biography

American photographer, filmmaker and engineer John Wehrheim was born in 1947 in Chicago. He graduated from the Catholic University of Notre Dame in 1969. After his studies, he traveled to the Hawaiian island of Kauai, where he created the photographic collection Taylor Camp. This work was later published as a photography book, and he made a documentary film about the collection, On the Edge of Paradise (2018). He establishes the largest papaya and banana plantations on the island, which is a testament to his renaissance talents. As a hydropower engineer, he travels to the Kingdom of Bhutan in 1991, where his work takes him to places no one had previously captured. There, he filmed the documentary Bhutan: Middle Path to Happiness (2018), for which he won two Emmy Awards. A year later, he is publishing a book about this Himalayan kingdom, Bhutan: The Secret Land of Happiness. He still photographs the country today and has taken more than 20,000 photographs there.
He has had solo exhibitions in cities such as Los Angeles, Bangkok, Thimphu, Tokyo, Prague and Honolulu. His work has been published across the world in magazines such as Magnus, Forbes, National Geographic and Huffington Post. His work is included in many collections in the United States. He currently lives on the Hawaiian island of Kauai.