Galleries this week and ‘The Lost Diggers’

March 2011

 

It has been a busy week!

On Tuesday I visited Australian Galleries in Smith Street to view the Drought Photographs by Sidney Nolan. A wonderful experience. Thursday night was the opening of Manstyle at NGV Australia, Federation Square, the new exhibition that “explores the extremes of masculine style and some of the most influential ideas that have pervaded menswear over the past three centuries.” A lively opening with lots of milliners, designers and fashionistas but only a modicum of style from many of the men in attendance.

Friday saw a trip up Flinders Lane to visit Arc One Gallery (review of Navigating Widely by Vanila Netto), Craft Victoria and drop in and say hello to Mary Lou Jelbart, director of fortyfivedownstairs and view the extensive renovations to the office and storage areas. Always good to catch up with Mary Lou. Then onward, battling terrible traffic, to the opening of New11 at the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art (ACCA) where the work was a bit ‘thin’ with a couple of notable exceptions.

Saturday saw a drive to Albert Street, Richmond to catch up with the galleries there – mostly stable exhibitions. Wade Marynowsky’s The Hosts: A Masquerade Of Improvising Automatons at John Buckley Gallery were interesting for 10 minutes or so reminding me of evil, corseted, twirling, marionette Daleks. I then had a chat with the delightful Edwin at Sophie Gannon Gallery and saw the first stages of installation of the upcoming Daniela Federici exhibition that is part of L’Oréal Melbourne Fashion Festival. Looks to be an interesting show.

Dr Marcus Bunyan

 

Antoinette or Louis Thuillier. 'No title (unknown Australian soldier wearing sheepskin jerkin)' c. 1916/17

 

Antoinette or Louis Thuillier
No title (unknown Australian soldier wearing sheepskin jerkin)
c. 1916/17
Glass negative
France

This image is published under fair dealing for the purposes of criticism or review (Commonwealth of Australia Consolidated Acts: Copyright Act 1968 – Sect 41)

 

 

This is a truly amazing story – finding these large format glass slides of First World War soldiers in an attic!

The original farmhouse has so much atmosphere. The photographs themselves are funny, poignant, informal, beautifully shot (the photographer, either Antoinette or Louis Thuillier, had a generous eye) and exhibit wonderful camaraderie

To actually find the original backdrop and be standing in the very place where these photographs were taken sends goose bumps up the spine just looking at the video. Imagine actually being there.

Look at the details – the hands, wedding rings, muddied boots, the children clasped by diggers with smokes in their hands, the props (chairs, motorbikes, guns, plant stands), sheepskin jerkins and the signs – We will soon, be, home, All that is left of them, France, 1916-1918.

They were so young, stoic, handsome. They stare out at you across time.

As Barthes and Sontag would say, these photographs haunt you.

 

View the video of the remarkable story from the link The Lost Diggers.

Look at hundreds of wonderful photographs from the links below:

    The Lost Diggers Facebook page
    Australian and international soldiers – Part 1
    Australian and international soldiers – Part 2
    Australian and international soldiers – Part 3

     

    Antoinette or Louis Thuillier. 'No title (unknown Australian soldier smoking a pipe)' c. 1916/17

     

    Antoinette or Louis Thuillier
    No title (unknown Australian soldier smoking a pipe)
    c. 1916/17
    Glass negative
    France

     

     

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    Review: ‘Rosemary Laing: leak’ at Tolarno Galleries, Melbourne

    Exhibition dates: 26th February – 19th March 2011

     

    Rosemary Laing (Australian, b. 1959) 'Jim' 2010

     

    Rosemary Laing (Australian, b. 1959)
    Jim
    2010
    From the series Leak
    C Type photograph
    Large image size 110 x 238cm
    Framed size 127 x 255cm
    Edition of 8

     

     

    You have just got to love these!

    A wonderful suite of five panoramic photographs, framed in white, inhabit the beautiful space of Tolarno Galleries, Melbourne. The photographs, different angles of the same bleached bone inverted skeleton of a house that was constructed by five builders in the Australian landscape around Cooma, New South Wales (no Photoshop tricks here!) have a subdued colour palette of misty greys and greens – all except one that has a vibrant blue sky with clouds, a man with his sheep dogs and a flock of sheep. Two of the photographs are framed upside down, one photograph a closer study from the same angle.

    The house on the hill is surrounded by wondrous light gently highlighting the wooden bones of the building embedded into the landscape in a context that is soon to become another suburban housing estate. The skeleton rises up (and falls into the sky) like a foundering ship amongst mysterious gum trees, surrounded by broken stumps and littered branches. The best photograph (top, below) has the effect of the bones being lit up like a giant puzzle.

    Examining ‘the encroachment of suburban development and the socio-economic and environmental pressures on the Australian landscape’ these photographs, named after the characters from Patrick White’s novel The Twyborn Affair, are ecologically aware and politically astute, as well as being fine photographs. The title of the exhibition, leak, perfectly sums up the osmotic nature of the encroachment of human habitation upon the ‘natural’ environment, which is already a mediated landscape due to European farming techniques and clearance of the landscape. But this is not a one way discourse; what do we call the ‘new’ Australian bush? What if the humpy invaded suburbia and pushed back the tide?

    I would love to see different types of houses in different contexts. I want to see more these are so good!

    Dr Marcus Bunyan


    Many thankx to Jan Minchin (Director) and Tolarno Galleries for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image. Both images courtesy of the artist and Tolarno Galleries © Rosemary Laing.

     

     

    Rosemary Laing (Australian, b. 1959) 'Prowse' 2010

     

    Rosemary Laing (Australian, b. 1959)
    Prowse
    2010
    From the series Leak
    C Type photograph
    Large image size 110 x 247cm
    Framed size 127 x 264cm
    Edition of 8

     

    Rosemary Laing (Australian, b. 1959) 'Aristide' 2010

     

    Rosemary Laing (Australian, b. 1959)
    Aristide
    2010
    From the series Leak
    C Type photograph
    60 x 122cm
    Edition of 8

     

    Rosemary Laing (Australian, b. 1959) 'Eddie' 2010

     

    Rosemary Laing (Australian, b. 1959)
    Eddie
    2010
    From the series Leak
    Type C photograph
    Framed 127.0 x 274.6cm
    Edition of 8

     

     

    Tolarno Galleries
    Level 4
    104 Exhibition Street
    Melbourne VIC 3000
    Australia
    Phone: 61 3 9654 6000

    Opening hours:
    Tue – Fri 10am – 5pm
    Sat 1pm – 4pm

    Tolarno Galleries website

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    Exhibition: ‘Alberto Giacometti. The Origin of Space: Retrospective of the mature work’ at Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg

    Exhibition dates: 20th November 2010 – 6th March 2011

     

    Many thankx to the Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

     

    Alberto Giacometti (Swiss, 1901-1966) 'La Cage/The Cage' 1950

     

    Alberto Giacometti (Swiss, 1901-1966)
    La Cage/The Cage
    1950
    Bronze
    175.6 x 37 x 39.6cm
    Collection Fondation Giacometti, Paris (Inv. Nr. : 1994-0177)
    Photo: Jean-Pierre Lagiewski
    © ADAGP / Fondation Giacometti, Paris / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2010

     

    Alberto Giacometti (Swiss, 1901-1966) 'Walking Man I' 1960

     

    Alberto Giacometti (Swiss, 1901-1966)
    Homme qui marche I/Walking Man I
    1960
    Bronze
    180.5 x 27 x 97cm
    Collection Fondation Giacometti, Paris (Inv. Nr.: 1994-0186)
    Photo: Jean-Pierre Lagiewski
    © ADAGP / Fondation Giacometti, Paris / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2010

     

    Alberto Giacometti (Swiss, 1901-1966) 'Falling Man' 1950

     

    Alberto Giacometti (Swiss, 1901-1966)
    Homme qui chavire/Falling Man
    1950
    Bronze, 60 x 22 x 36cm
    Avignon, Musée Calvet (Depot Musée d’Orsay); Gift of Philippe Meyer, 2000 (Inv. Nr.: RF 4655)
    Photo: © bpk/RMN/Aix-en-Provence, Musée Granet/Michèle Bellot
    © ADAGP / Succession Giacometti / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2010

     

     

    “Space does not exist, it has to be created… Every sculpture based on the assumption that space exists is wrong; there is only the illusion of space.”


    Alberto Giacometti, Notes, circa 1949

     

     

    For the first time in 12 years, the Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg is presenting a comprehensive overview of Alberto Giacometti’s mature work in Germany. Around 60 sculptures will be displayed alongside more than 30 paintings and several drawings in the circa 2000 square meter exhibition space. The exhibition offers unique insights into the fascinating oeuvre of one of the most important artists of the twentieth century.

    Giacometti’s vision of situating his figures within their own space and temporality will be realised for the first time in Wolfsburg as the exhibition architecture has been specially designed and constructed around the sculptures on display. Each of the carefully chosen works is provided with the space it requires to unfurl its true strengths. The exhibition clearly demonstrates the continued relevance of the work of Giacometti, who died in 1966, and its lasting influence on subsequent generations of artists. With his completely new conception of the human figure in relation to space and time, Giacometti can literally be considered – and this is one of the exhibition’s key theses – the inventor of virtual space.

    Organised in cooperation with the Museum der Moderne Salzburg, the exhibition juxtaposes major works from Giacometti’s oeuvre with selected pieces from private collections and the artist’s estate. The works on show in Wolfsburg are drawn in large part from the estate holdings of the Alberto and Annette Giacometti Foundation in Paris; this is the first time they have been presented on this scale in Germany. The display also includes important loans from the Alberto Giacometti Foundation in Zurich, as well as works from leading museums and private collections in Europe and the United States.

    Press release from the Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg website

     

    Alberto Giacometti (Swiss, 1901-1966) 'Figure in a Box between Two Boxes which are Houses' 1950

     

    Alberto Giacometti (Swiss, 1901-1966)
    Figurine dans une boîte entre deux boîtes qui sont des maisons/Figure in a Box between Two Boxes which are Houses
    1950
    Bronze, glass, figurine painted white, 29.5 x 53.5 x 9.4cm
    Private collection (Inv. Nr.: GS 45)
    © ADAGP / Succession Giacometti / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2010

     

    Alberto Giacometti (Swiss, 1901-1966) 'Man walking in the Rain' 1948

     

    Alberto Giacometti (Swiss, 1901-1966)
    Homme qui marche sous la pluie/Man walking in the Rain
    1948
    Bronze
    46.5 x 77 x 15cm
    Kunsthaus Zürich, Alberto Giacometti-Stiftung (Inv. Nr.: GS 35)
    © ADAGP / Succession Giacometti / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2010

     

    Alberto Giacometti (Swiss, 1901-1966) 'Small Man on a Base' 1940-41

     

    Alberto Giacometti (Swiss, 1901-1966)
    Petit homme sur socle/Small Man on a Base
    1940-1941
    Bronze, 8/8
    Height: 8.4cm
    Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebæk, Dänemark
    Photo: Brøndum & Co. Poul Buchart/Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaek, Dänemark
    © ADAGP / Succession Giacometti / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2010

     

    Alberto Giacometti (Swiss, 1901-1966) 'Large Narrow Head' 1954

     

    Alberto Giacometti (Swiss, 1901-1966)
    Grande tête mince/Large Narrow Head
    1954
    Bronze, 4/6
    64.5 x 38.1 x 24.4cm
    Collection Fondation Giacometti, Paris (Inv. Nr.: 1994-0175)
    Photo: Marc Domage
    © ADAGP / Fondation Giacometti, Paris / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2010

     

    Alberto Giacometti (Swiss, 1901-1966) 'Three Men Walking' 1948
    Screenshot

     

    Alberto Giacometti (Swiss, 1901-1966)
    Three Men Walking
    1948
    Bronze
    28 3/10 × 12 9/10 × 13 2/5 in | 72 × 32.7 × 34.1cm

     

     

    Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg
    Abteilung Kommunikation
    Hollerplatz 1
    38440 Wolfsburg
    Phone: +49 (0)5361 2669 69

    Opening hours:
    Tuesday – Sunday 11am – 6pm
    Monday closed

    Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg website

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    Exhibition: ‘Duane Hanson/Gregory Crewdson: Uncanny realities’ at Museum Frieder Burda, Baden-Baden

    Exhibition dates: 27th November 2010 – 6th March 2011

    Curators: Götz Adriani and Patricia Kamp

     

    Installation photograph of the exhibition 'Duane Hanson/Gregory Crewdson: Uncanny realities' at Museum Frieder Burda

     

    Installation photograph of the exhibition Duane Hanson/Gregory Crewdson: Uncanny realities at Museum Frieder Burda

     

     

    A great double act!

    An inspired curatorial choice brings the work of these two artist’s together – life-like sculptures of everyday Americans mixing with theatrical, deadpan staged images. The mis en scène created in the exhibition space, the tension between sculpture, photograph, frame and space – is delicious.

    Crewdson is at his best when he resists the obvious narrative (for example, all the traffic lights stuck on yellow in the photograph Untitled (Brief Encounter) (2006, see below). Personally I prefer his staged photographs with pairs or groups of people within the image, rather than a single figure. The storyline is more ambiguous and the photographs of people walking along railway tracks always remind me of the Stephen King story filmed as Stand by Me (1986) with a young River Phoenix. Either way they are intoxicating, the viewer drawn into these wonderful, dark psychological dramas.

    Dr Marcus Bunyan


    Many thankx to Museum Frieder Burda for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

     

     

    Installation photograph of the exhibition 'Duane Hanson/Gregory Crewdson: Uncanny realities' at Museum Frieder Burda with Duane Hanson 'Old Couple on a Bench' (1994) in the foreground and Gregory Crewdson 'Untitled (Worthington Street)' (2006) in the background

     

    Installation photograph of the exhibition Duane Hanson/Gregory Crewdson: Uncanny realities at Museum Frieder Burda with Duane Hanson Old Couple on a Bench (1994) in the foreground and Gregory Crewdson Untitled (Worthington Street) (2006) in the background

     

     

    The works by the two American artists Duane Hanson (1925-1996) and Gregory Crewdson (born in 1962) confuse and touch the observer.

    Both artists present people in their everyday lives, with hopes, yearnings and broken dreams. People we usually do not notice, aged and marked by reality, by life itself. While Hanson shapes his life-sized figures with a great deal of sympathy, Crewdson rather spreads a gloomy and depressing atmosphere in his pictures of lonely people in their houses, gardens and in streets.

    With his realistic sculptures, the American artist Duane Hanson has become a synonym for contemporary realism in contemporary art. Typical motives are average people like  housewives, waitresses, car dealers, janitors. Posture and expression of these figures are very close to reality. The photographer Gregory Crewdson arranges his large format pictures with cineastic arrangements and lets the abyss behind every-day life scenes become visible.

    The exhibition at the Frieder Burda Museum presents about 30 figures by Duane Hanson, mainly from the artist’s estate, in dialogue with 20 large format works from the series Beneath the Roses by the photographer Gregory Crewdson. The photographies are mainly owned by the artist himself.

    The curators Götz Adriani and Patricia Kamp are not aiming at a direct confrontation. They are rather presenting two artists who work with different materials, but deal with very similar topics. Both artists, Hanson and Crewdson, are grand when it comes to arranging their art. Crewdson always puts very much effort into the arrangements of the scenes in his pictures, and Hanson always keeps an eye on his close surroundings.

    The works of both artists impressively reflect the complexity of the human existence. …

     

    Duane Hanson (American, 1925-1996) 'Children Playing Game' 1979

     

    Duane Hanson (American, 1925-1996)
    Children Playing Game
    1979
    Polyvinyl chloride, coloured with oil, mixed technique and accessories
    Collection Hanson, Davie, Florida
    © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2010

     

    Duane Hanson (American, 1925-1996) 'Tourists II' 1988

     

    Duane Hanson (American, 1925-1996)
    Tourists II
    1988
    polyvinyl chloride, coloured with oil, mixed technique, accessories
    Collection Hanson, Davie, Florida
    © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2010

     

    Duane Hanson (American, 1925-1996) 'Self-Portrait with Model' 1979

     

    Duane Hanson (American, 1925-1996)
    Self-Portrait with Model
    1979
    Polyvinyl chloride, coloured with oil, mixed technique and accessories
    Collection Hanson, Davie, Florida
    © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2010

     

    Duane Hanson (American, 1925-1996) 'Housepainter I' 1984/1988

     

    Duane Hanson (American, 1925-1996)
    Housepainter I
    1984/1988
    Epoxy resin, coloured with oil, mixed technique, accessories
    Collection Hanson, Davie, Florida
    © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2010

     

    Duane Hanson (American, 1925-1996) 'Queenie II' 1988

     

    Duane Hanson (American, 1925-1996)
    Queenie II
    1988
    Epoxy resin, coloured with oil, mixed technique, accessories
    Collection Hanson, Davie, Florida
    © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2010

     

    Duane Hanson

    Duane Hanson (1925-1996) is one of the most influential American sculptors of the 20th century committed to Realism.

    The proximity to reality of his lifelike, detailed human figures make for perfect irritation. Despite all the seriousness hidden behind the socio-critical issue, which prompted Hanson to create his protagonists, the figures have a great deal of entertainment value, above all – and it is precisely this that makes them so appealing – due to their occasional gravitational bearing. Featuring twenty-five works, the exhibition presents a representative cross-section of the American’s extensive oeuvre, which comprises a total of only 114 works. The figures enter a dialogue with the large-format photographs by the American photo artist Gregory Crewdson, who has a flair for relating human abysses in a different and very subtle way.

    In the early 1950s, after completing his study of sculpture at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, Hanson was initially guided by the abstract style of art that prevailed during this period. However, this would not lead to a satisfactory result. In 1953, he turned his back on his homeland and spent nearly ten years of his life earning a living as an art teacher at American schools in Germany. It was during this period that he discovered the materials polyester resin and fibreglass, which would become crucial for his future creative work. After returning to the United States, Hanson spent the ensuing years perfecting his artistic skills in the treatment of these materials in such a way that the boundaries between reality and artificial figure seem to blur – where Hanson was never concerned with the mere illusionistic reproduction of reality, but chose this veristic manner of representation as a medium for communicating his concern in terms of content, i.e., shedding light on the tragedy of human lives that hauntingly consolidates in his characters.

    In the human figures produced in the early work phase in the late 1960s, Hanson responded to the sociopolitical tension and protest movements of the day. He created sculptures and ensembles that very directly take issue with social hardship, violence, or racism, and he took a stand for the victims of this system, for the people who never had a chance to successfully face the demands made by life.

    Influenced by Pop Art, Hanson turned to thematising everyday American life, frequently switching his observations to a critically satirical attitude that was, however, always guided by compassion. Housewives, construction workers, car salesmen, or janitors – the models for his figures are people in the American middle and working classes in whose biographies the disappointment in the American dream has become entrenched. He often puts his people and all of their small insufficiencies into perspective with ironic kindness, such as, for example, the Tourists, in whom are combined all of the clichés associated with the typical Florida tourist.

    Hanson’s participation in documenta 5 in Kassel in 1972 gave rise to his international breakthrough. His figures became more lifelike; they more and more naturally blended into their surroundings. Their gestures, facial expressions, and postures related the emotional and physical burdens of life. The artist concentrated on older people in whose physiognomies one can read the traces of existence, the impact of loneliness, the problems that accompany being old, and their alienation. Hanson was struck by the isolation of this generation by society, a circumstance that has not lost any of its relevance.

    Hanson’s interest in rendering the figures as lifelike as possible is surely not rooted in a desire to want to convince the viewer of their “authenticity”; rather, their lifelikeness was meant to move the viewer to experience empathy and concern, thus manifesting Hanson’s humanism. Human values and destinies comprise the focus of his art; he transforms the reality of life into the realism of art and in doing so sharpens our outlook and our view of the world, our fellow human beings, and our own life as well.

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (Birth)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 2007

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (Birth)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    2007
    Digital carbon print
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (Blue Period)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 2005

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (Blue Period)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    2005
    Digital carbon print
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (Brief Encounter)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 2006

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (Brief Encounter)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    2006
    Digital carbon print
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (Debutante)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 2006

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (Debutante)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    2006
    Digital carbon print
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (Forest Clearing)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 2006

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (Forest Clearing)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    2006
    Digital carbon print
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (House Fire)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 2004

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (House Fire)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    2004
    Digital carbon print
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (Kent Street)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 2007

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (Kent Street)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    2007
    Digital carbon print
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (Maple Street)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 2004

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (Maple Street)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    Digital carbon print
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (Merchants Row)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 2003

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (Merchants Row)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    Digital carbon print
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

    Gregory Crewdson

    Born in 1962 in Brooklyn, New York, Gregory Crewdson is one of the best-known contemporary photographers internationally. In his most important series to date Beneath the Roses, which he created between 2003 and 2008, Crewdson explores the American psyche and the disturbing realities at play within quotidian environments. In his dramatically detailed and realistic photographs situated in America’s morbid, small-town milieu, the artist succeeds to stimulate the viewer’s subconscious on various levels. Twenty outstanding works from the series are being placed in a dialogue with sculptures by Duane Hanson. Gregory Crewdson does not spare either effort or expenses for the production of his visual inventions, which are reminiscent of film productions. The stagings are planned and arranged in advance down to the smallest detail and then elaborately implemented in a major logistical and human effort. The final photograph is the result of what is frequently work lasting several weeks, a circumstance that is substantiated by its depths in terms of content and its technical perfection.

    Gregory Crewdson works in two distinct ways to create his photographs. On one hand, he works on location in real neighborhoods and townships. On the other hand, the artist works on the soundstage inventing his world from scratch. Before the photographic location productions start, Crewdson drives around upstate Massachusetts looking for interesting settings, which he then has prepared in an elaborate process. In most cases, local residents of the ramshackle towns also play the characters in his work. Crewdson works closely with the art department of the museum MASSMoCA, when shooting his pictures done on the soundstage. The results are much like stills from a movie and reflect his affinity with cinema. Filmmakers such as Alfred Hitchcock, David Lynch, or Steven Spielberg are the inspiration for Crewdson’s uncanny stories, which he seems to freeze in a single snapshot in time.

    The construction of this narrative instant demonstrates the artist’s extraordinary talent. Like sophisticated literature does the reader, his works pose a challenge to viewers, as they have to mount the decisive share of the creative effort themselves. A brief, fleeting glance is not enough. Viewers become immersed in the staged scenes full of details and accessories to experience a moment that is intensely real. Fantasy and the powers of imagination and association fashion the visual event in the mind to become a subjective, alternative reality – an uncanny reality.

    In his photographs, Crewdson deliberately works with emotions and fears that extend through his oeuvre in recurring, in part very different scenarios. They mirror alienation, absence, shame, sexuality, and loss – human states of emotion that deeply touch the viewer. That the artist focuses on the mind in his works may be due to the fact that, as the son of a psychoanalyst, he experienced insight into the profundity of the human soul very early on. His works can be regarded as metaphors for fears and desires, for the things that take place below the surface, the palpable, as if Crewdson wanted to make visible a new or different level of reality situated somewhere between the conscious and subconscious.

    At the same time, the Beneath the Roses series can be seen as a psychological study of the American province. The settings show social realities and document the economic decline of a society behind the backdrop of the American way of life. Unsentimental and direct, they reflect working-class life – which allows us to strike an arc to the work by Duane Hanson, whose oeuvre also revolves around the concept of humanity, the facets of which he lends expression to in his silent, introverted figures.

    The evolution of Beneath the Roses was documented in a series of production stills, original drawings by the artist, and detailed lighting plans. About sixty works from this reservoir are presented in a studio exhibition at the museum in order to illustrate the complex technical process of producing the photographs. Gregory Crewdson completed his study of Street Photography at the Yale School of Art in New Haven in 1988. He returned to Yale in 1993 and has occupied the Chair of Photography since.

    Press release from the Museum Frieder Burda website

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (Natural Bridge)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 2007

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (Natural Bridge)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    Digital carbon print
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (Railway Children)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 2003

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (Railway Children)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    2003
    Digital carbon print
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (RBS Automotive)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 2007

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (RBS Automotive)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    2007
    Digital carbon print
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (Shane)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 2006

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (Shane)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    2006
    Digital carbon print
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (Sunday Roast)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 2005

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (Sunday Roast)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    2005
    Digital carbon print
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (Temple Street)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 2006

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (Temple Street)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    2006
    Digital carbon print
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (The Father)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 2007

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (The Father)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    Digital carbon print
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (Trailer Park)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 200

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (Trailer Park)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    2007
    Digital carbon print
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962) 'Untitled (Worthington Street)' from the series 'Beneath the Roses' 2006

     

    Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
    Untitled (Worthington Street)
    From the series Beneath the Roses
    2006
    144.8 x 223.5cm
    Gregory Crewdson, Courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York
    © Gregory Crewdson, 2010

     

     

    Museum Frieder Burda
    Lichtentaler Allee 8b
    D-76530 Baden-Baden
    Phone: +49 (0)7221 / 3 98 98-0

    Opening hours:
    Tuesday – Sunday 10am – 6pm
    Closed Mondays

    Museum Frieder Burda website

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    Exhibition: ‘Painting on paper – Josef Albers in America’ at Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich

    Exhibition dates: 16th December 2010 – 6th March 2011

     

    Josef Albers (German, 1888-1976) 'Study for a Adobe' c. 1947

     

    Josef Albers (German, 1888-1976)
    Study for a Adobe
    c. 1947
    Oil and graphite on blotting paper
    24.1 × 30.5cm
    The Josef Albers Museum Quadrat Bottrop
    © 2010 The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation/VG Bildkunst, Bonn/Artists Rights Society, New York

     

     

    I really like the work of Josef Albers and these paintings on paper, studies for later work, give insight into that rare quality of Albers – his ability to mould, no that’s not the right word – his ability to accrete colours and spaces together, to build tectonic plates of colour that collide and burst against each other forming an “osmosis of plane and space.” These harmonic oscillations of vibrant colour form a pleasing equilibrium in the mind, freeing the viewer from conceptual thought and allowing us to enter a different state of being. It is fascinating to me that he painted these studies on blotting paper as the paper seems to soak up the colours, intensifying their existence.

    Dr Marcus Bunyan


    Many thankx to Pinakothek der Moderne for allowing me to publish the photographs of the art in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

     

     

    Josef Albers (German, 1888-1976) 'Color Study for a Variant / Adobe' Nd

     

    Josef Albers (German, 1888-1976)
    Color Study for a Variant / Adobe
    Nd
    Oil on blotting paper
    48.2 × 60.9cm
    The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation
    © 2010 The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation/VG Bildkunst, Bonn/Artists Rights Society, New York

     

    Josef Albers (German, 1888-1976) 'Study for a Variant / Adobe (I)' c. 1947

     

    Josef Albers (German, 1888-1976)
    Study for a Variant / Adobe (I)
    c. 1947
    Oil on blotting paper with pencil
    24.1 × 30.6cm
    The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation
    © 2010 The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation/VG Bildkunst, Bonn/Artists Rights Society, New York

     

     

    The exhibition is the first to show such a concentration of paintings on paper by Josef Albers, some of which will be completely unknown to the general public. Works in oil on paper, painted by the artist since the 1940s in preparation for the Adobe and Variant series in particular, are presented together with a large group related to his principal work “Homage to the Square” from the artist’s late period, that he focused on from 1950 until his death in 1976.

    Josef Albers was only able to fully develop into an important artist and influential teacher after emigrating to the USA. From around 1940 onwards, Albers was inspired by Mexico’s pre-Columbian architecture, sculpture and textile art that boosted his sense for the aesthetic and led to idiosyncratic, radiant colour compositions, the likes of which had never been seen at that time in European modern art. Around 1950, Albers discovered what was for him the ideal formal shape of colour – the square.

    The works exhibited surprise the viewer with their spontaneity, their search for immediacy and the extraordinary delicacy of their colours. Albers studied the interaction of colours like virtually no other. Through his works on paper in particular it can be seen in detail how the artist achieved such a thorough osmosis of plane and space through increasing the density of the colours used.

    Text from the Pinakothek der Moderne website

     

    Josef Albers (German, 1888-1976) 'Color Study for Homage to the Square' Nd

     

    Josef Albers (German, 1888-1976)
    Color Study for Homage to the Square
    Nd
    Oil and graphite on blotting paper with varnish
    30.5 × 30.5cm
    The Josef Albers Museum Quadrat Bottrop
    © 2010 The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation/VG Bildkunst, Bonn/Artists Rights Society, New York

     

    Josef Albers (German, 1888-1976) 'Color Study for Homage to the Square' Nd

     

    Josef Albers (German, 1888-1976)
    Color Study for Homage to the Square
    Nd
    Oil on blotting paper
    33.2 × 30.9cm
    The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation
    © 2010 The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation/VG Bildkunst, Bonn/Artists Rights Society, New York

     

    Josef Albers (German, 1888-1976) 'Color Study for Homage to the Square' Nd

     

    Josef Albers (German, 1888-1976)
    Color Study for Homage to the Square
    Nd
    Oil on blotting paper with varnish
    33.6 × 30.4cm
    The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation
    © 2010 The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation/VG Bildkunst, Bonn/Artists Rights Society, New York

     

     

    Pinakothek Der Moderne
    Barer Strasse 40
    Munich

    Gallery hours:
    Daily except Monday 10am – 6pm
    Thursday 10am – 8pm

    Pinakothek der Moderne website

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    Exhibition: ‘ANALOG: trends in sound and picture’ at The Riflemaker Gallery, London

    Exhibition dates: 10th January – 3rd March 2011

     

    Richard Nicholson (British, b. 1968) 'Peter Guest darkroom' 2006

     

    Richard Nicholson (British, b. 1968)
    Peter Guest darkroom
    2006
    Courtesy of the artist and Riflemaker

     

     

    I started my life as an artist as a black and white photographer. I spent many hours ensconced in the enveloping black and red safety light of the darkroom, listening to the sound of running water – a nurturing, womb-like environment despite the toxic nature of the chemicals involved. It was magical to see the image appear in the developing tray out of nothing, an alchemical process that never ceased to amaze me, a link to the early days of photography and the wonder that those first images would have generated. At that time the photography course at Phillip Institute (soon to become part of RMIT University) had 3 huge darkrooms; now they have one with only a couple of enlargers.

    Working in those darkrooms did teach you a solid foundation for your art practice: for one thing, the value of developing a working methodology – choosing a good negative that you wanted to print, spending time with it, adjusting the enlarger to obtain optimum size and printing it beautifully – for in a good day I could only print one or possibly two negatives a day. Then there was the process of washing the chemicals out of the paper and drying the prints. The whole process taught you patience, precision and dedication to the task at hand so that the negative revealed in the print something else that might be present, some ‘other’ that photography has the ability to capture if you take time, are aware and receptive to this illumination. These disciplines have held me in good stead during the following years.

    I still love analogue colour and black and white photographs. To me it is like the difference between an LP and a CD. The CD might have it all over the LP in terms of information captured but there is this ineffable feeling about an LP with it’s scratches and pops, it’s atmosphere. The same goes for an analogue print and it is something that you can’t quite put your finger on. I believe that there is still a place for analogue prints in the world – for the magical process, for their beauty, sensitivity and downright inspiration. Long may they live.

    Dr Marcus Bunyan


    Many thankx to The Riflemaker Gallery for allowing me to publish the photographs and text in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

     

     

    Richard Nicholson (British, b. 1968) 'Roy Bass darkroom, Michael Dyer Associates, Covent Garden' 2006

     

    Richard Nicholson (British, b. 1968)
    Roy Bass darkroom, Michael Dyer Associates, Covent Garden
    2006
    Courtesy of the artist and Riflemaker

     

     

    The End of Professional Photographic Darkrooms and Music Recording Studios

    The impact of digital technology on print photography and music production is the subject of ANALOG at Riflemaker, Soho from 10 January 2011. The exhibition invites us inside the last of London’s photographic darkrooms as well as taking a visit to a working reel-to-reel music studio, courtesy of an installation by Lewis Durham of the band Kitty, Daisy & Lewis.

    Richard Nicholson. “A Survey of London’s Remaining Professional Darkrooms 2006-2010”

    1979. The year my father constructed a darkroom and introduced me to photography. I was immediately entranced by the printing process and cherished the long hours spent in this dark, private space; standing in the gloom of the red safelight, slowly rocking the print tray, watching the ghost-like image reveal itself through the gently lapping developer solution. As I experimented with the many formulas and techniques detailed in my father’s guidebooks, I often found the most interesting prints were the chemically stained accidents pulled from the bin at the end of a session. The darkroom became a bolt-hole for me; a private space where I could escape from the noise of family life. As I passed through school, university and various jobs, I often sought out a darkroom to escape from the crowd. But as I honed my skills – solarising, masking, bleaching, split-toning, hand-colouring – my prints began to attract public attention.

    2006. I’m working in London as a photographer. I’m still shooting film, but digital is becoming ubiquitous. The photographic manufacturer Durst announces that it will no longer be producing enlargers. Annual sales have dropped from a peak of 107,000 units in 1979 to just a few hundred units in recent years. The darkroom has always been integral to my practice as a photographer. But for how much longer? Once bustling hire darkrooms have become eerily quiet, and London labs are dropping like flies. Joe’s Basement, Primary, Metro Soho, Keishi Colour, Ceta, Team Photographic, Sky – all gone. Polaroid has stopped making instant film and Kodak and Fuji are discontinuing one emulsion after another. The recently introduced Canon 5d camera has persuaded many diehard film photographers that digital is the future, and those who remain unconvinced are facing clients who no longer have the budgets for film, Polaroids, clip-tests, contact-sheets and prints. The darkroom’s days are numbered.

    Against this backdrop, I begin to look at the darkroom in a new light. My enlarger (a handsomely engineered GeM 504) has been an invisible tool, but now it presents itself as a sad and lumpen creature in the face of extinction. With its long neck, heavy head and inviting focus handles, the thing has a human form which elicits sympathy – the surrounding matt black walls add an air of theatricality. Hearing tales of noble machines being unceremoniously dumped in skips when labs close down, I decide to document them before they all disappear.

    I chose to photograph professional darkrooms because they are often shrouded in mystery; hidden behind the tidy glass facade of the lab’s front desk. As a keen printer myself, I was curious to see the workspaces of the master printers; craftsmen who had spent their working lives in darkness. The spaces I discovered were often haphazard and brimming with personal details; coffee cups, CD collections, family snapshots, unpaid invoices, curious knick-knacks brought back by globe-trotting photographers. These human elements transformed what might have been a detached typology of modernist industrial design into something more intimate and nuanced.

    I photographed each darkroom on large format film. Working in total darkness, I carefully painted these normally dingy spaces with a flashgun, seeking to reveal the beauty of the machinery, and shed some light on the clutter stained with the patina of time. Some of the darkrooms were busy, whilst others were neglected (all attention being given to the new inkjet printer in the adjoining corridor). Many of the darkrooms were facing imminent closure. (The one with the slogan pinned to the wall, ‘I want to stay here forever’, was dismantled the day after I photographed it and is currently being converted into luxury apartments.)

    Many of the iconic images of recent decades were crafted in these rooms. Mike Spry’s high contrast lith prints of U2 and Depeche Mode for music photographer Anton Corbijn, Peter Guest’s black and white prints of the Trainspotting cast for portrait photographer Lorenzo Agius, or Brian Dowling’s intricately masked colour prints for fashion photographer Nick Knight. Such commercial work is now routinely carried out in Photoshop and professional printers have had to seek out new avenues for their skills. The art market is perhaps the last bastion for traditional darkroom printing, but even this area is being taken over by digital machines – Lightjet, Lambda, and Chromira printers. But suddenly there is a resurgence of interest in analog processes amongst younger photographers who were brought up on digital. Left cold by the clinical nature of the virtual workspace, they seek depth and authenticity via the chemical ambience of the traditional darkroom. Alternative processes from the early history of photography are being rediscovered, Polaroid instant film has been relaunched, and the craze for poorly engineered Russian and Chinese film cameras (Lomo, Holga, Diana etc) continues unabated.

    I wonder at this enthusiasm. Like many committed film photographers, I experienced a belated epiphany when I finally switched to digital. My darkroom skills were easily transferred to the digital realm, and I soon discovered that Photoshop offered creative printmaking possibilities that far exceeded what I could achieve in the darkroom. Whilst I don’t miss the chemistry of the darkroom – much of it highly toxic – I do miss the aura of the red safelight and the soothing sound of running water. I miss the excited sense of performance when making a complicated print (there’s no ‘undo’ button in the darkroom), and the physicality of dodging and burning – the manual shaping of the light. With film I had a network of contacts across London and felt embedded in the city, whereas with digital I feel disembodied. The history of photography is young and fast moving. The darkroom era was short lived. This collection of images represents its apotheosis.”

    Richard Nicholson, November 2010

    I would like to thank all the printers who kindly allowed me to photograph their darkrooms.

    Nicholson, Richard. “A Survey of London’s Remaining Professional Darkrooms 2006-2010,” in Taylor, Tot (ed.,). ANALOG: trends in sound and picture book. London: Riflemaker, 2011, pp. 17-19. ISBN 978-0-9563571-6-8.

     

    Richard Nicholson (British, b. 1968) 'Roy Snell darkroom, Earlsfield' 2006

     

    Richard Nicholson (British, b. 1968)
    Roy Snell darkroom, Earlsfield
    2006
    Courtesy of the artist and Riflemaker

     

    Richard Nicholson (British, b. 1968) 'Gordon Bishop Associates, Paddington Street' 2006

     

    Richard Nicholson (British, b. 1968)
    Gordon Bishop Associates, Paddington Street
    2006
    Courtesy of the artist and Riflemaker

     

     

    The Riflemaker Gallery
    79 Beak Street, Regent Street,
    London W1

    Opening hours:
    Monday – Friday 10.00am – 6.00pm
    Saturday 12.00pm – 6.00pm

    Riflemaker website

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    Vale Dr John Cato (1926-2011)

    February 2011

     

    It is with much sadness that I note the death of respected Australian photographer and teacher Dr John Cato (1926-2011). Son of Australian photographer Jack Cato, who wrote one of the first histories of Australian photography (The Story of the Camera in Australia (1955)), John was apprentice to his father before setting up a commercial studio with Athol Shmith that ran from 1950-1971. Dr Cato then joined Shmith at the fledgling Prahran College of Advanced Education photography course in 1974, becoming head of the course when Shmith retired in 1979, a position he held until John retired in 1991.

    I was fortunate enough to get to know John and his vivacious wife Dawn. I worked with him and co-curatored his retrospective with William Heimerman, ‘…and his forms were without number’ at The Photographers’ Gallery, South Yarra, in 2002. My catalogue essay from this exhibition is reproduced below.

    John was always generous with his time and advice. His photographs are sensitive, lyrical renditions of the Australian landscape. He had a wonderful ear for the land and for the word, a musical lyricism that was unusual in Australian photographers of the early 1970s. He understood how a person from European background could have connection to this land, this Australia, without being afraid to express this sense of belonging; he also imaged an Aboriginal philosophy (that all spirits have a physical presence and everything physical has a spiritual presence) tapping into one of the major themes of his personal work: the mirror held up to reveal an’other’ world – the language of ambiguity and ambivalence (the dichotomy of opposites e.g. black / white, masculine / feminine) speaking through the photographic print.

    His contribution to the art of photography in Australia is outstanding. What are the precedents for a visual essay in Australian photography before John Cato? I ask the reader to consider this question.

    It would be fantastic if the National Gallery of Victoria could organise a large exhibition and publication of his work, gathering photographs from collections across the land, much like the successful retrospective of the work of John Davis held in 2010. Cato’s work needs a greater appreciation throughout Australia because of it’s seminal nature, containing as it does the seeds of later development for Australian photographers. His educational contribution to the development of photography as an art form within Australia should also be acknowledged in separate essays for his influence was immense. His life, his teaching and his work deserves nothing less.

    Dr Marcus Bunyan

     

    ‘… and his forms were without number’

    John Cato: A Retrospective of the Photographic Work 1971-1991

    This writing on the photographic work of Dr John Cato from 1971-1991 is the catalogue essay to a retrospective of his work held at The Photographers’ Gallery in Prahran, Melbourne in 2002. Dr Cato forged his voice as a photographic artist in the early 1970s when photography was just starting to be taken seriously as an art form in Australia. He was a pioneer in the field, and became an educator in art photography. He is respected as one of Australia’s preeminent photographers of the last century.

     

    With the arrival of ‘The New Photography’1 from Europe in the early 1930’s, the formalist style of Modernism was increasingly adopted by photographers who sought to express through photography the new spirit of the age. In the formal construction of the images, the abstract geometry, the unusual camera angles and the use of strong lighting, the representation ‘of the thing in itself’2 was of prime importance. Subject matter often emphasised the monumentality of the factory, machine or body/landscape. The connection of the photographer with the object photographed was usually one of sensitivity and awareness to an external relationship that resulted in a formalist beauty.

    Following the upheaval and devastation of the Second World War, photography in Australia was influenced by the ‘Documentary’ style. This “came to be understood as involved chiefly with creating aesthetic experiences … associated with investigation of the social and political environment.”3 This new movement of social realism, “… a human record intimately bound with a moment of perception,”4 was not dissimilar to Henri Cartier-Bresson’s ‘decisive moment’ (images a la sauvette) where existence and essence are in balance.5

    The culmination of the ‘Documentary’ style of photography was The Family of Man exhibition curated by Edward Steichen that toured Australia in 1959.6 This exhibition, seen many times by John Cato,7 had a theme of optimism in the unity and dignity of man. The structure of the images in ‘Documentary’ photography echoed those of the earlier ‘New Photography’.

    Max Dupain “stressed the objective, impersonal and scientific character of the camera; the photographer could reveal truth by his prerogative of selection.”8 This may have been an objective truth, an external vocalising of a vision that concerned itself more with exterior influences rather than an internal meditation upon the subject matter.

     

    John Cato (Australian, 1926-2011) 'Untitled' from the series 'Essay I, Landscapes in a Figure' 1971-1979

     

    John Cato (Australian, 1926-2011)
    Untitled from the series Essay I, Landscapes in a Figure
    1971-1979
    Silver gelatin photograph

     

     

    In 1971, John Cato’s personal photographic work was exhibited for the first time as part of the group show Frontiers at the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne.9 Earth Song emerged into an environment of social upheaval inflamed by Australian involvement in the Vietnam War. It provided a group of enthusiastic people who were beginning to be interested in photography as art, an opportunity to see the world, and photography, through a different lens. The 52 colour photographic prints in Earth Song, were shown in a sequence that used melodic line and symphonic form as its metaphoric basis, standing both as individual photographs and as part of a total concept.10

    In the intensity of the holistic vision, in the connection to the subconscious, the images elucidate the photographers’ search for a perception of the world. This involved an attainment of a receptive state that allowed the cracks, creases and angles inherent in the blank slate of creation to become meaningful. The sequence contained images that can be seen as ‘acts of revelation’,11confirmed and expanded by supporting photographs, and they unearthed a new vocabulary for the discussion of spiritual and political issues by the viewer. They may be seen as a metaphor for life.

    The use of sequence, internal meditation and ‘revelation’, although not revolutionary in world terms,12 were perhaps unique in the history of Australian photography at that time. During the production of Earth Song, John Cato was still running a commercial studio in partnership with the photographer Athol Shmith and much of his early personal work was undertaken during holidays and spare time away from the studio. Eventually he abandoned being a commercial photographer in favour of a new career as an educator, but found this left him with even less time to pursue his personal work.13

    Earth Song (1970-1971) was followed by the black and white sequences:

     

     Tree – A Journey18 images1971-1973 
     Petroglyphs14 images1971-1973 
     Seawind14 images1971-1975 
     Proteus18 images1974-1977 
     Waterway16 images1974-1979 

     

    Together they form the extensive series Essay I, Landscapes in a Figure, parts of which are held in the permanent photography collection of the National Gallery of Victoria.14

     

    John Cato (Australian, 1926-2011) 'Untitled' from the series 'Essay I, Landscapes in a Figure' 1971-1979

     

    John Cato (Australian, 1926-2011)
    Untitled from the series Essay I, Landscapes in a Figure
    1971-1979
    Silver gelatin photograph

     

     

    The inspiration for Essay I and later personal work came from many sources. An indebtedness to his father, the photographer Jack Cato, is gratefully acknowledged. Cato also acknowledges the influence of literature: William Shakespeare (especially the Sonnets, and As You Like It), William Blake, Walt Whitman (Leaves of Grass), Lewis Carroll (Through the Looking Glass), the Bible; and of music (symphonic form), the mythology of the Dreamtime and Aboriginal rock paintings.15 Each body of work in Essay I was based on an expression of nature, the elements and the Creation. They can be seen as Equivalents16 of his most profound life experiences, his life philosophy illuminated in physical form.

    John Cato was able to develop the vocabulary of his own inner landscape while leaving the interpretation of this landscape open to the imagination of the viewer. Seeing himself as a photographer rather than an artist, he used the camera as a tool to mediate between what he saw in his mind’s eye, the subjects he photographed and the surface of the photographic negative.17 Photographing ‘in attention’, much as recommended by the teacher and philosopher Krishnamurti,18 he hoped for a circular connection between the photographer and the subject photographed. He then looked for verification of this connection in the negative and, eventually, in the final print.

    Essay II, Figures in a Landscape, had already been started before the completion of Essay I and it consists of three black and white sequences:

     

     Alcheringa11 images1978-1981 
     Broken Spears11 images1978-1983 
     Mantracks22 images in pairs1978-1983 

     

    The photographs in Essay II seem to express “the sublimation of Aboriginal culture by Europeans”19 and, as such, are of a more political nature. Although this is not obvious in the photographs of Alcheringa, the images in this sequence celebrating the duality of reality and reflection, substance and shadow, it is more insistent in the symbology of Broken Spears and Mantracks. Using the metaphor of the fence post (white man / black man in Broken Spears) and contrasting Aboriginal and European ‘sacred’ sites (in pairs of images in Mantracks), John Cato comments on the destruction of a culture and spirit that had existed for thousands of years living in harmony with the land.

    In his imaging of an Aboriginal philosophy (that all spirits have a physical presence and everything physical has a spiritual presence) he again tapped one of the major themes of his personal work: the mirror held up to reveal an’other’ world. Cato saw that even as they are part of the whole, the duality of positive / negative, black / white, masculine / feminine are always in conflict.20 In the exploration of the conceptual richness buried within the dichotomy of opposites, Cato sought to enunciate the language of ambiguity and ambivalence,21 speaking through the photographic print.

    The theme of duality was further expanded in his last main body of work, Double Concerto: An Essay in Fiction:

     

     Double Concerto (Pat Noone)30 images1984-1990 
     Double Concerto (Chris Noone)19 images1985-1991 

     

    Double Concerto may be seen as a critique of the power of witness and John Cato created two ‘other’ personas, Pat Noone and Chris Noone, to visualise alternative conditions within himself. The Essay explored the idea that if you send two people to the same location they will take photographs that are completely different from each other, that tell a distinct story about the location and their self:

    “For the truth of the matter is that people have mixed feelings and confused opinions and are subject to contradictory expectations and outcomes, in every sphere of experience.”22

    This slightly schizophrenic confusion between the two witnesses is further highlighted by Pat Noone using single black and white images in sequence. Chris Noone, on the other hand, uses multiple colour images joined together to form panoramic landscapes that feature two opposing horizons. The use of colour imagery in Double Concerto, with its link to the colour work of Earth Song, can be seen to mark the closing of the circle in terms of John Cato’s personal work. In Another Way of Telling, John Berger states that …

    “Photography, unlike drawing, does not possess a language. The photographic image is produced instantaneously by the reflection of light; its figuration is not impregnated by experience or consciousness.”23


    But in the personal work of John Cato it is a reflection of the psyche, not of light, that allows a consciousness to be present in the figuration of the photographic prints. The personal work is an expression of his self, his experience, his story and t(his) language, is our language, if we allow our imagination to speak.

    Dr Marcus Bunyan 2002

     

    Footnotes

    1/ Newton, Gael. Shades of Light: Photography and Australia 1839-1988. Sydney: Australian National Gallery, William Collins, 1988, p. 109

    2/ Newton, Gael. Max Dupain. Sydney: David Ell Press,1980, p. 34

    3/ Ibid., p. 32

    4/ Greenough, Sarah (et al). On the Art of Fixing a Shadow: 150 Years of Photography. Boston: National Gallery of Art, Bullfinch Press, 1989, p. 256

    5/ Ibid., p. 256

    6/ Newton, Gael. Shades of Light: Photography and Australia 1839-1988. Sydney: Australian National Gallery, William Collins, 1988, p. 131

    7/ Ibid., p. 131

    8/ Newton, Gael. Max Dupain. Sydney: David Ell Press, 1980, p. 32

    9/ Only the second exhibition by Australian photographers at the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne

    10/ Shmith, Athol. Light Vision No.1. Melbourne: Jean-Marc Le Pechoux (editor and publisher), Sept 1977, p. 21

    11/ Berger, John and Mohr, Jean. Another Way of Telling. New York: Pantheon Books, 1982, p. 118

    12/ Hall, James Baker. Minor White: Rites and Passages. New York: Aperture, 1978

    13/ Conversation with the photographer 29/01/1997, Melbourne, Victoria

    14/ Newton, Gael. Shades of Light: Photography and Australia 1839-1988. Sydney: Australian National Gallery, William Collins, 1988, p. 135, Footnote 7; p. 149

    15/ Conversation with the photographer 22/01/1997, Melbourne, Victoria

    16/ Norman, Dorothy. Alfred Stieglitz. New York: Aperture, 1976, p. 5

    17/ Ibid.,

    18/ Krishnamurti. Beginnings of Learning. London: Penguin, 1975, p. 131

    19/ Strong, Geoff. Review. The Age. Melbourne, 28/04/1982

    20/ Conversation with the photographer 22/01/1997, Melbourne, Victoria

    21/ The principal definition for ambiguity in Websters Third New International Dictionary is: “admitting of two or more meanings … referring to two or more things at the same time.”
    That for ambivalence is “contradictory and oscillating subjective states.”
    Quoted in Davis, Fred. Fashion, Culture and Identity. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992, p. 21.

    22/ Levine, Donald. The Flight From Ambiguity. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1985

    23/ Berger, John and Mohr, Jean. Another Way of Telling. New York: Pantheon Books, 1982, p. 95

     

     

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    Exhibition: ‘Joan Fontcuberta: Landscapes without Memory’ at Foam Fotografiemuseum, Amsterdam

    Exhibition dates: 26th November 2010 – 27th February 2010

     

    Joan Fontcuberta (Spanish, b. 1955) 'Orogenesis Derain' 2004

     

    Joan Fontcuberta (Spanish, b. 1955)
    Orogenesis Derain
    2004
    © Joan Fontcuberta

     

     

    It might be useful to know the meaning and application of the word ‘orogenesis’ in relation to the work of Fontcuberta.

     

    Orogeny refers to forces and events leading to a severe structural deformation of the Earth’s crust due to the engagement of tectonic plates. Response to such engagement results in the formation of long tracts of highly deformed rock called orogens or orogenic belts. The word “orogeny” comes from the Greek (oros for “mountain” plus genesis for “creation” or “origin”), and it is the primary mechanism by which mountains are built on continents. Orogens develop while a continental plate is crumpled and thickened to form mountain ranges, and involve a great range of geological processes collectively called orogenesis

    An orogenic event may be studied as (a) a tectonic structural event, (b) as a geographical event, and (c) a chronological event. Orogenic events (a) cause distinctive structural phenomena related to tectonic activity, (b) affect rocks and crust in particular regions, and (c) happen within a specific period of time.” (Wikipedia)

     

     

    In his post-landscape, post-memory worlds constructed by computer technologies there are mediated memories present – of the original paintings, shifting and reinterpreted by the computer and of place interpreted by the original artist – that form a simulated memory of double amnesia. Orogensis is a perfect title for these works as they map such a double memory over time in an future anterior (the death of the past (this has been) and the present (this will have be), pace Barthes); the word and the works also closely align to the word erogenous for these images stimulate the senses and heighten our appreciation and personal memory of the constructed environment. And how beautiful they are!

    Dr Marcus Bunyan


    Many thankx to the Foam Fotografiemuseum for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

     

     

    Joan Fontcuberta (Spanish, b. 1955) 'Orogenesis Kandinsky' 2004

     

    Joan Fontcuberta (Spanish, b. 1955)
    Orogenesis Kandinsky
    2004
    © Joan Fontcuberta

     

    Joan Fontcuberta (Spanish, b. 1955) 'Orogenesis Pollock' 2002

     

    Joan Fontcuberta (Spanish, b. 1955)
    Orogenesis Pollock
    2002
    © Joan Fontcuberta

     

     

    For the project Landscapes without Memory Catalan artist Joan Fontcuberta (b. 1955, Barcelona) used software developed by the US Air Force. It translates two-dimensional cartographic data into a simulated three-dimensional image. Instead of feeding maps into the software, in Landscapes without Memory Fontcuberta inserts painted landscapes: from Gauguin to Van Gogh, from Cezanne to Turner and Constable. The software translates them into new, virtual landscapes that Fontcuberta calls ‘post-landscapes’. They form a no-man’s land between the virtual and the real, between truth and illusion.

    Ever since the medium was first invented, photography’s relationship with the real world has been as perplexing as it is fascinating. Far more than a medium such as paint, photography was supposed to have a certain level of truth. In recent decades in particular the idea has taken root that truth and reality are ambiguous concepts in photography. The unprecedented digital revolution has brought the potential for manipulation into focus. How much more reliable is the photographic image of the real world? Who and what can we still believe? This juxtaposition of illusion and reality lies at the heart of Spanish artist Joan Fontcuberta’s oeuvre. At the same time, he also refers to the connection between science and truth. Like photography (itself a product of science), we see science as a way of expanding our knowledge of the real world using rational, objective, verifiable methods. Science has a certain authority: what science proves is true. Fontcuberta turns the myth of scientific authority around and manages to persuade the public in many of his projects of the veracity of a purely fictitious narrative – simply by expressing himself in the language of science.

    In recent years, Fontcuberta has been especially fascinated by the influence of the digital revolution on the way we communicate and on our use of image. Landscapes without Memory is one such project. He begins here by subjectively interpreting and portraying a landscape, and then using software to interpret and translate the artificial object. The result is a new reality which Foncuberta calls ‘technologically-defined contemporary hallucinations’.

    This exhibition is part of the Life Like platform, a project launched by Foam, EYE Film Institute of the Netherlands and Van Gogh Museum to draw attention to the realist art movement. The three museums join forces from 8 October 2010 to 16 January 2011 to throw light on the different aspects of this multi-disciplinary movement.

    Press release from the Foam website

     

    Joan Fontcuberta (Spanish, b. 1955) 'Orogenesis Atget' 2004

     

    Joan Fontcuberta (Spanish, b. 1955)
    Orogenesis Atget
    2004
    © Joan Fontcuberta

     

    Joan Fontcuberta (Spanish, b. 1955)
'Orogenesis Braque' 2004

     

    Joan Fontcuberta (Spanish, b. 1955)
    Orogenesis Braque
    2004
    © Joan Fontcuberta

     

    Joan Fontcuberta (Spanish, b. 1955) 'Orogenesis Le Gray' 2004

     

    Joan Fontcuberta (Spanish, b. 1955)
    Orogenesis Le Gray
    2004
    © Joan Fontcuberta

     

    Joan Fontcuberta (Spanish, b. 1955) 'Orogenesis Turner' 2003

     

    Joan Fontcuberta (Spanish, b. 1955)
    Orogenesis Turner
    2003
    © Joan Fontcuberta

     

    Joan Fontcuberta (Spanish, b. 1955) 'Orogenesis Weston' 2004

     

    Joan Fontcuberta (Spanish, b. 1955)
    Orogenesis Weston
    2004
    © Joan Fontcuberta

     

     

    Foam Fotografiemuseum
    Keizersgracht 609
    1017 DS Amsterdam
    The Netherlands
    Phone: +31 (0)20 551 6500

    Opening hours:
    Mon – Wed 10am – 6pm
    Thu – Fri 10am – 9pm
    Sat – Sun 10am – 6pm

    Foam website

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    Exhibition: ‘Acquisitions of Twentieth-Century Photography’ at the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

    Exhibition dates: 7th December 2010 – 14th February 2011

     

    Many thankx to the Rijksmuseum for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

     

    Lewis Hine (American, 1874-1940) 'Don't Smoke, Visits Saloons' 1910

     

    Lewis Hine (American, 1874-1940)
    Don’t Smoke, Visits Saloons
    1910

    Lewis Hine. May 1910. Wilmington, Delaware. “James Lequlla, newsboy, age 12. Selling newspapers 3 years. Average earnings 50 cents per week. Selling newspapers own choice. Earnings not needed at home. Don’t smoke. Visits saloons. Works 7 hours per day.”

     

    Gordon Parks (American, 1912-2006) 'Bessie Fontenelle and Little Richard in bed, Harlem New York' 1968

     

    Gordon Parks (American, 1912-2006)
    Bessie Fontenelle and Little Richard in bed, Harlem New York
    1968
    Gelatin silver print

     

    Helen Levitt (American, 1913-2009) 'Squatting girl/spider girl, New York City' 1980

     

    Helen Levitt (American, 1913-2009)
    Squatting girl/spider girl, New York City
    1980

     

     

    From 7 December, the Rijksmuseum will display a selection of 20th-century photographic works acquired in recent years with the support of Baker & McKenzie. The sponsorship from the renowned law firm has already allowed the museum to purchase more than thirty photographs, including works by László Moholy-Nagy, Bill Brandt, Robert Capa and Helen Levitt, as well as photography books by Man Ray and others. When it reopens in 2013, the Rijksmuseum will be the only museum in the Netherlands able to provide an overview of the history of photography in the Netherlands and abroad.

    The most recent acquisition sponsored by Baker & McKenzie and the independent art fund Vereniging Rembrandt is a monumental photograph by Bauhaus photographer László Moholy-Nagy (1895-1946). The photograph from 1929 is a key work that marks the transition into modernity. From atop a high bridge, the Pont Transbordeur in Marseille, Moholy-Nagy pointed his camera straight down, where an almost abstract pattern of metal beams contrasted with the sailing boat passing under the bridge. Metal, bridges, machines, aeroplanes and cars formed the icons of a new era for Moholy-Nagy’s generation of artists. They were faced with advancing technology, an enormous increase in scale and mechanisation, and a faster pace of life.

    The other photographs to be displayed represent a range of movements in the history of photography. Two photographs by Emil Otto Hoppé (1878-1972) will be displayed. They are both studies of form focusing first and foremost on composition, just as in the Moholy-Nagy work. It was in around 1920 that Hoppé photographed the play of light on cobblestones in New York, and the building of a metal construction in Philadelphia.

    The documentary aspects of photography will also be highlighted, with magnificent portraits of a black mother and her child in a report about Harlem in the late 1960s (by Gordon Parks), and a portrait of two men in the southern ‘Cotton States’ of America during the Great Depression of the 1930s (by Peter Sekaer). As early as 1909, Lewis Hine used photography as a weapon in the struggle against injustice. Commissioned by the National Child Labour Committee he documented the child labour industry, in this case a small boy standing on the street selling newspapers.

    During the 1930s, Bill Brandt published a (now famous) book on life in London at the time, from which came the photograph Sky lightens over the suburbs, which is both a study of form and documentary in nature. It shows a forest of glistening roofs, depicted in a melancholy yet realistic manner.

    In 1942, Piet Mondrian was photographed in his studio by Arnold Newman, a session from which the Rijksmuseum has acquired a range of photographs. There are few portraits of Mondrian in Dutch collections, making this series particularly special.

    A work by Helen Levitt is one of the few colour photographs included in the exhibition. Until the 1980s, colour photography was simply ‘not done’ and Levitt was one of the first to experiment with the method. The photograph of a girl searching for something underneath a green car is a marvellous example of composition in colour.

    Press release from the Rijksmuseum website

     

    Arnold Newman (American, 1918-2006) 'Piet Mondrian, New York' 1942

     

    Arnold Newman (American, 1918-2006)
    Piet Mondrian, New York
    1942
    Gelatin silver print

     

    Emil Otto Hoppé (British born Germany, 1979-1942) 'Steel construction, Philadelphia' 1926

     

    Emil Otto Hoppé (British born Germany, 1979-1942)
    Steel construction, Philadelphia
    1926
    Gelatin silver print

     

    László Moholy-Nagy (Hungary, 1895-1946) 'View from Pont Transbordeur, Marseille' 1929

     

    László Moholy-Nagy (Hungary, 1895-1946)
    View from Pont Transbordeur, Marseille
    1929
    Gelatin silver print

     

     

    Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
    Jan Luijkenstraat 1, Amsterdam

    Opening hours:
    Every day from 9.00 to 17.00

    Rijksmuseum website

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    Exhibition: ‘Mark Morrisroe’ at Fotomuseum Winterthur, Zurich

    Exhibition dates: 27th November 2010 – 13th February, 2011

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989) 'Untitled [Self-Portrait]' 1979 from the exhibition 'Mark Morrisroe' at Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989)
    Untitled [Self-Portrait]
    1979
    T-108 Polaroid
    8.5 x 10.7cm
    Sammlung Matthew Marks
    © Nachlass Mark Morrisroe (Sammlung Ringier) im Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

     

    This is an emotional posting for me. I came out as a gay man in 1975, six short years after the Stonewall Riots in New York City that were the touchstone of the gay liberation movement. I partied hard in my youth in London and didn’t have my first HIV test until 1982/1983. We just didn’t know about the disease at all. Those two weeks waiting for the result of that first test, for that is how long it took to get the test results back in those days, seemed terribly long. Even worse was the time spent sitting outside the doctor’s office waiting to be called in to get the test results – literally life and death as there was no treatment, no drugs to help, no hope.

    I lost many friends over the years to this terrible disease that continues to decimate human beings all around the world. It was only by pure luck that I survived. This posting shows the work of one artist who didn’t survive. He as experimenting with his sexuality (and documenting it) in Boston at much the same time that I was in London and so I feel an affinity with this beautiful and gifted man. What great images he made! How much poorer is the world without his presence and indeed the presence of all human beings who have succumbed to the disease.

    Dr Marcus Bunyan


    Many thankx to the Fotomuseum Winterthur, Zurich for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

     

     

    “You know, I’m going to be really famous, so you’re lucky to be meeting me.”


    Mark Morrisroe, as quoted by Jack Pierson

     

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989) '
After the Laone (In the Home of a London Rubber Fetishist, Dec 82)' 1982 from the exhibition 'Mark Morrisroe' at Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989)
    After the Laone (In the Home of a London Rubber Fetishist, Dec 82)
    1982
    C-Print von Sandwich-Negativ, bearbeitet mit Retuschefarben und Marker
    39.5 x 50.6cm
    © Nachlass Mark Morrisroe (Sammlung Ringier) im Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989) '
La Môme Piaf [Pat and Thierry]' 1982 from the exhibition 'Mark Morrisroe' at Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989)
    La Môme Piaf [Pat and Thierry]
    1982
    C-Print von Sandwich-Negativ, bearbeitet mit Retuschefarben und Marker
    50.7 x 40.5cm
    © Nachlass Mark Morrisroe (Sammlung Ringier) im Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989) 'Pat as Kiki, fall 81 Paris' 1985 from the exhibition 'Mark Morrisroe' at Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989)
    Pat as Kiki, fall 81 Paris
    1985
    Silbergelatine-Abzug von T-665 Polaroid Negativ, bearbeitet mit Retuschefarbe
    25.2 x 20.2cm
    © Nachlass Mark Morrisroe (Sammlung Ringier) im Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989) 'Still Life with Marble Figures (in the Home of Stephen Tashjian NYC)' 1985 from the exhibition 'Mark Morrisroe' at Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989)
    Still Life with Marble Figures (in the Home of Stephen Tashjian NYC)
    1985
    Negative sandwich
    40 x 50cm
    © Nachlass Mark Morrisroe (Sammlung Ringier) im Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989) '
Blow Both of Us, Gail Thacker and Me, Summer 1978' 1986 from the exhibition 'Mark Morrisroe' at Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989)
    Blow Both of Us, Gail Thacker and Me, Summer 1978
    1986
    C-Print, bearbeitet mit Marker
    40.5 x 40.5cm
    © Nachlass Mark Morrisroe (Sammlung Ringier) im Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

     

    More than twenty years after Mark Morrisroe’s early death, Fotomuseum Winterthur is presenting the first comprehensive survey exhibition on his work – an extraordinarily diverse body of works that has usually been shown in group shows, mostly in connection with his famous Boston colleagues Nan Goldin and David Armstrong. The exhibition, curated by Beatrix Ruf and Thomas Seelig, is a collaboration between Fotomuseum Winterthur and the Estate of Mark Morrisroe (Ringier Collection).

    In the Boston of the early 1980s, Mark Morrisroe was a well-known, charismatic figure, who often appeared in drag together with the artist friends he had met while studying and who performed in bars and clubs with Stephen Tashjian (alias Tabboo!) as the “Clam Twins.” As an artist and photographer he was also at the center of the lively Boston punk scene, whose most important protagonists were known well beyond the city. Like Nan Goldin and David Armstrong before him, Mark Morrisroe moved to New York in the mid-1980s to try his luck there. He died – far too early – in July 1989, at the age of just 30, from the consequences of AIDS.

    References to Morrisroe’s origins and past are surrounded by a dense mist that makes it impossible to differentiate between truth and fantasy. By continually inventing and varying scenarios about himself, the settings for which extended from the past to the future, Morrisroe always understood how to collaborate actively in shaping his own myth, feeding it with fanciful layers of lies, or indeed letting it float into the void. His public presence could be engaging, and sometimes loud and disturbing, too, but silence fell after his death – both around the artist and his photography.

    In retrospect, Morrisroe’s art studies in Boston and his years in the punk and art world of that city can in fact be seen as his most content and productive period. There he discovered a positive approach to his sexuality, and in the person of Jonathan “Jack” Pierson, who appears in many of his photographs and Polaroids, found his first great love. The first intimate portraits of close friends such as Lynelle White (with whom he published five editions of the collaged, photocopied and coloured-in Dirt fanzine in 1975-1976) were produced there, as were many of his first narcissistic self-scenarios in front of the camera. There Morrisroe shot the low-budget trash film Nymph-O-Maniac in the style of his idol John Waters, with Pia Howard as the main performer.

    Mark Morrisroe’s short creative period, of barely ten years, was characterized by an amazing output of photographic experiments, and stands out for its constantly searching, inquisitive, and always individual aesthetic, as a glance at the photographer’s extensive estate reveals. The estate was acquired by the Ringier Collection in 2004 and was placed in the care of the Fotomuseum Winterthur in 2006. The estate comprises around 600 colour prints – a few of them duplicates – approximately as many gelatin silver prints, about 800 of the 2,000 known Polaroid shots by Morrisroe, all the negatives, contact prints, and some of his personal papers, giving some idea of the unbridled enjoyment and energy with which Mark Morrisroe threw himself into his life and work.

    The exhibition will feature early colour and black-and-white prints, Polaroids, and Polaroid negatives from which it was possible to make enlargements, as well as the early and late photograms he processed by hand. During his art studies at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts Boston (1978-1982) Morrisroe was already experimenting with various interpretations of reprography, trying to understand the possibilities of the medium and its inherent limitations, and using different ingenious printing processes for his photographic prints. Within his close circle of friends he soon laid claim to the “invention” of what are called “sandwich” prints – enlargements of double negatives of the same subject mounted on top of one another – which yielded an elaborate pictorial quality, producing a very iconic impression in the final result, which over time Morrisroe learned to use in an increasingly controlled way. Early on, the artist recognised the intrinsic value of prints – irrespective of the medium used to produce them – as pictorial objects that he could manipulate, colour, paint, and write on at will.

    By all accounts, Mark Morrisroe was a man driven to achieve fame and recognition. Restless and demanding – of himself as well as of others – he always wanted more, and from this inner restlessness he derived enormous resources of artistic energy. Right to the very end, his life and work, down to the photograms feverishly produced in the makeshift darkroom in his hospital, which have hardly ever been publicly shown until today, attest to an unlimited and ecstatic search for a sensual, aesthetic, and always ambivalently charged pictorial world.

    The Estate of Mark Morrisroe (Collection Ringier) at the Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Following Pat Hearn’s untimely death in 2000, there was a break in exhibition activities focusing on Mark Morrisroe. From 1998 the Ringier Collection had been continuously in contact with Pat Hearn about Mark Morrisroe’s work and they continued the discussion with Pat Hearn’s husband, Colin de Land of American Fine Arts, who had inherited the Mark Morrisroe estate. In 2002 Colin de Land approached Michael Ringier and Beatrix Ruf to discuss options for the future of the Morrisroe estate because he had also fallen ill and was very aware that he was going to die soon himself. In their conversations, the main concern was how responsibility for this important artist could be taken on by keeping the oeuvre together as a comprehensive group of works and making it accessible to a broad audience internationally as well. The Ringier Collection proposed to Colin de Land that they secure the estate by acquiring it and placing it in the Fotomuseum Winterthur. Furthermore, the decision was made to form a foundation for the Morrisroe estate, which would be the home to a comprehensive group of works and would keep the estate together, provide conversational and curatorial continuity, and act as the leading force in communicating and distributing the work through exhibitions and publications.”

    Press release from Fotomuseum Winterthur website

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989) 'Untitled [Self-Portrait with Jonathan]' c. 1978 from the exhibition 'Mark Morrisroe' at Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989)
    Untitled [Self-Portrait with Jonathan]
    c. 1978
    T-665 Polaroid
    10.7 x 8.5cm
    © Nachlass Mark Morrisroe (Sammlung Ringier) im Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989) '
Self-Portrait (to Brent)' 1982
 from the exhibition 'Mark Morrisroe' at Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989)
    Self-Portrait (to Brent)
    1982
    C-Print von Sandwich-Negativ, bearbeitet mit Retuschefarben und Marker
    50.5 x 40.5cm
    Privatsammlung Brent Sikkema
    © Nachlass Mark Morrisroe (Sammlung Ringier) im Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989) 'Untitled (Lynelle)' c. 1985 from the exhibition 'Mark Morrisroe' at Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989)
    Untitled [Lynelle]
    c. 1985
    T-665 Polaroid
    10.7 x 8.5cm
    © Nachlass Mark Morrisroe (Sammlung Ringier) im Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989) 'Baby Steffenelli [John S.]' 1985 from the exhibition 'Mark Morrisroe' at Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989)
    Baby Steffenelli [John S.]
    1985
    Negative sandwich, retouched with ink and inscribed with marker
    31 x 44cm
    © Nachlass Mark Morrisroe (Sammlung Ringier) im Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    The portrait of Baby Steffenelli, captured by the provocative photographer Mark Morrisroe, offers a glimpse into the bold, rebellious spirit of the 1980s underground art scene. Morrisroe, known for his raw and unflinching style, frequently blurred the lines between art and performance, creating images that were both intimate and confrontational. This photograph of Steffenelli, a figure often associated with the New York City art world of the time, reflects the vibrant energy of a subculture that thrived on pushing societal boundaries. Steffenelli, much like Morrisroe, embraced unconventional identities, and their collaboration in this photo serves as a visual statement of individuality and defiance, characteristic of the era’s exploration of gender, sexuality, and self-expression.

    The 1980s were a transformative time for the art world, particularly in New York, where artists like Morrisroe, Robert Mapplethorpe, and David Wojnarowicz were redefining the possibilities of photography, painting, and performance. Morrisroe, who was also a member of the artistic collective called “The Factory” and part of the East Village art scene, used his camera as a tool to document the subversive lifestyles of his peers. His work, often marked by a sense of urgency and intimacy, captured the raw emotions and complexities of those living on the fringes of society. This photo of Steffenelli, taken in 1985, is a prime example of how Morrisroe’s photographs served as a historical document, reflecting the ongoing dialogues surrounding identity and the body in the context of the post-punk, pre-AIDS crisis era.

    For Steffenelli, this image became an emblem of the intersection between personal expression and the broader cultural shifts taking place in the 1980s. The vibrant, sometimes jarring energy of Morrisroe’s photography mirrored the boldness with which people like Steffenelli navigated their place in an increasingly complex world. The photo not only immortalises Steffenelli’s individuality but also serves as a testament to the powerful and often controversial art scene that defined this period. In this single frame, Morrisroe captures not only a person but the essence of a moment in time – a snapshot of defiance, liberation, and transformation in the face of societal norms.

    Text from the Old Historical Facebook page

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989) 'Untitled [Self-Portrait]' 1986
 from the exhibition 'Mark Morrisroe' at Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989)
    Untitled [Self-Portrait]
    1986
    Silbergelatine-Abzug
    42.5 x 29.8cm
    © Nachlass Mark Morrisroe (Sammlung Ringier) im Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989) '
Untitled' 1987 from the exhibition 'Mark Morrisroe' at Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989)
    Untitled
    1987
    Silbergelatine-Abzug, Fotogramm von Drucksache
    50.4 x 40.3cm
    © Nachlass Mark Morrisroe (Sammlung Ringier) im Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989) '
Untitled' c. 1988 from the exhibition 'Mark Morrisroe' at Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

    Mark Morrisroe (American, 1959-1989)
    Untitled
    c. 1988
    C-Print von Sandwich-Negativ
    50.7 x 40.5cm
    © Nachlass Mark Morrisroe (Sammlung Ringier) im Fotomuseum Winterthur

     

     

    Fotomuseum Winterthur
    Grüzenstrasse 44 + 45
    CH-8400 Winterthur (Zurich)

    Opening hours:
    Tuesday to Sunday 11am – 6pm
    Wednesday 11am to 8pm
    Closed on Mondays

    Fotomuseum Winterthur website

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