Exhibition: ‘Robert Mapplethorpe’ at NRW-Forum Dusseldorf

Exhibition dates: 6th February – 15th August, 2010

 

Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989) 'Phillip Prioleau' 1980 from the exhibition 'Robert Mapplethorpe' at NRW-Forum Dusseldorf, Feb - August, 2010

 

Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
Phillip Prioleau
1980
© Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
Used by permission

 

 

Robert Mapplethorpe was a classical photographer with a great eye for form and beauty, an artist who explored the worlds he knew and lived (homosexuality, sadomasochistic practices, desire for black men) with keen observations into the manifestations of their existence, insights that are only shocking to those who have never been exposed to these worlds. If we observe that our history is written as a series of interpretive shifts then perhaps we can further articulate that the development of an artist’s career is a series of interpretations, an “investigation into the events that have led us to constitute ourselves and to recognise ourselves as subjects of what we are doing, thinking, saying.”1 Mapplethorpe was such an artist.

The early work is gritty and raw, exposing audiences to sexuality and the body as catalyst for social change, photographs the “general public” had never seen before. Early photographs such as the sequence of photographs Charles and Jim (1974) feature ‘natural’ bodies – hairy, scrawny, thin – in close physical proximity with each other, engaged in gay sex. There is a tenderness and affection to the sequence as the couple undress, suck, kiss and embrace.

At the same time that Mapplethorpe was photographing the first of his black nudes (Mapplethorpe’s photographs of black men come from a lineage that can be traced back to Fred Holland Day who also photographed black men), he was also portraying acts of sexual progressiveness in his photographs of the gay S/M scene. In these photographs the bodies are usually shielded from scrutiny by leather and rubber but are revealing of the intentions and personalities of the people depicted in them, perhaps because Mapplethorpe was taking part in these activities himself as well as depicting them. There is a sense of connection with the people and the situations that occur before his lens in the S/M photographs.

As time progresses the work becomes more about surfaces and form, about the polished perfection of the body, about that exquisite corpse, the form of the flower. Later work is usually staged against a contextless background (see photographs below) as though the artefacts have no grounding in reality, only desire. Bodies are dissected, cut-up into manageable pieces – the objectified body. Mapplethorpe liked to view the body cut up into different libidinal zones much as in the reclaimed artefacts of classical sculpture. The viewer is seduced by the sensuous nature of the bodies surfaces, the body objectified for the viewers pleasure. The photographs reveal very little of the inner self of the person being photographed. The named body is placed on a pedestal (see photograph of Phillip Prioleau (1980) below) much as a trophy or a vase of flowers. I believe this isolation, this objectivity is one of the major criticisms of most of Mapplethorpe’s later photographs of the body – they reveal very little of the sitter only the clarity of perfect formalised beauty and aesthetic design.

While this criticism is pertinent it still does not deny the power of these images. Anyone who saw the retrospective of his work at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney in 1995 can attest to the overwhelming presence of his work when seen in the flesh (so to speak!). Mapplethorpe’s body of work hangs from a single thread: an inquisitive mind undertaking an investigation in the condition of the world’s becoming. His last works, when he knew he was dying, are as moving for any gay man who has lost friends over the years to HIV/AIDS as anything on record, are as moving for any human being that faces the evidence of their own mortality. Fearless to the last, never afraid to express who he was, how he felt and what he saw, Mapplethorpe will long be remembered in the annals of visual art.

Dr Marcus Bunyan

 

1/ Foucault, Michel. “What is Enlightenment?,” trans. C. Porter in Rabinow, Paul (ed.,). The Essential Works of Michel Foucualt, 1954-1984. Vol.1. New York: New Press, 1997, p. 315.


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

     

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe. 'Parrot Tulips' 1988 from the exhibition 'Robert Mapplethorpe' at NRW-Forum Dusseldorf, Feb - August, 2010

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
    Parrot Tulips
    1988
    © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
    Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989) 'Ajitto' 1981 from the exhibition 'Robert Mapplethorpe' at NRW-Forum Dusseldorf, Feb - August, 2010

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
    Ajitto
    1981
    © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
    Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989) 'David Hockney' 1976 © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
    David Hockney
    1976
    © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
    Used by permission

     

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe, who was born in 1946 and passed away in 1989, is one of the few artists who truly deserve to be known far beyond the borders of the art world. Mapplethorpe dominated photography in the late twentieth century and paved the way for the recognition of photography as an art form in its own right; he firmly anchored the subject of homosexuality in mass culture and created a classic photographic image, mostly of male bodies, which found its way into commercial photography.

    In 2010, the NRW-Forum in Düsseldorf will organise a major retrospective of Robert Mapplethorpe’s photographs. His work was first shown in Germany in 1977 as part of documenta 6 in Kassel and then in a European solo exhibition in 1981 with German venues in Frankfurt, Hamburg and Munich. In addition to various museum and gallery exhibitions the largest museum exhibition in Germany of Mapplethorpe’s work took place in 1997 when the worldwide Mapplethorpe retrospective, which opened at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Denmark, traveled to the Staatsgalerie in Stuttgart. The last time Robert Mapplethorpe’s works were shown in Düsseldorf was in the exhibition ‘Mapplethorpe versus Rodin’ at the Kunsthalle in 1992.

    Both during his life and since his death, Mapplethorpe’s work has been the subject of much controversial debate, particularly in the USA. Right up until the end of the twentieth century, exhibitions of his photographs were sometimes boycotted, censured, or in one case cancelled. His radical portrayals of nudity and sexual acts were always controversial; his photos of sadomasochistic practices in particular caused a stir and frequently resulted in protests outside exhibitions and in one instance, a lawsuits was brought against a museum director.

    In 2008, the Supreme Court in Japan ruled that Mapplethorpe’s erotic images did not contravene the country’s ban on pornography and released a volume of his photographs that had been seized and held for over eight years. As far as the American critic Arthur C. Danto was concerned, Mapplethorpe created ‘some of the most shocking and indeed some of the most dangerous images in modern photography, or even in the history of art.’

    In Germany, on the other hand, Mapplethorpe’s photographs were part of the ‘aesthetic socialisation’ of the generations that grew up in the 1980s and early 1990s. Lisa Ortgioes, the presenter of the German women’s television programme frau tv, notes that during this time, Mapplethorpe’s photos were sold as posters; his ‘black’ portraits in particular being a regular feature on the walls of student bedrooms at the time.

    The curator of the exhibition, Werner Lippert, is quick to point out that ‘this exhibition needs no justification. Mapplethorpe was quite simply and unquestionably one of the most important photographers of the twentieth century. It is an artistic necessity.’

    The exhibition in the NRW-Forum covers all areas of Mapplethorpe’s work, from portraits and self-portraits, homosexuality, nudes, flowers and the quintessence of his oeuvre the photographic images of sculptures, including early Polaroids. The photographs are arranged according to themes such as ‘self portraits’, which includes the infamous shot of him with a bullwhip inserted in his anus, as well as his almost poetic portraits of his muse, Patti Smith, the photographs of black men versus white women, the body builder Lisa Lyon, the juxtaposition of penises and flowers (which Mapplethorpe himself commented on in an interview: ‘… I’ve tried to juxtapose a flower, then a picture of a cock, then a portrait, so that you could see they were the same’), and finally those images of classical beauty based on renaissance sculptures, and impressive portraits of children and celebrities of the day.

    Despite the obvious references to the Renaissance idea of what constitutes ideal beauty and the history of photography from Wilhelm von Gloeden to Man Ray, this exhibition shows Robert Mapplethorpe as an artist who is firmly anchored is his era; his contemporaries are Andy Warhol and Brice Marden; Polaroids were the medium of choice in the 1970s, and the focus on the body and sexuality was, at the time, for many artists like Vito Acconci or Bruce Nauman a theme that was key to social change. Above all, Robert Mapplethorpe developed his own photographic style that paid homage to the ideals of perfection and form. ‘I look for the perfection of form. I do this in portraits, in photographs of penises, in photographs of flowers.’ The fact that the photographs are displayed on snow-white walls underpins this view of his work and consciously moves away from the coy Boudoir-style presentation of his photographs on lilac and purple walls a dominant feature of exhibitions of Mapplethorpe’s work for many years and opens up the work to a more concept-based, minimalist view of things.

    The selection of over 150 photographs covers early Polaroids from 1973 to his final self-portraits from the year 1988, which show how marked he was by illness and hint at his impending death, and also includes both many well-known, almost iconic images as well as some never-before seen or rarely shown works. The curators delved deep into the collection of the New York-based Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation to create this retrospective.

    Press release from the NRW-Forum Dusseldorf website [Online] Cited 02/08/2010 no longer available online

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989) 'Greg Cauley-Cock' 1980 © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
    Greg Cauley-Cock
    1980
    © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
    Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989) 'Patti Smith' 1975 © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
    Patti Smith
    1975
    © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
    Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989) 'Self Portrait' 1988 © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
    Self Portrait
    1988
    © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
    Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989) 'Lowell Smith' 1981 © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
    Lowell Smith
    1981
    © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
    Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989) 'Thomas' 1987 © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
    Thomas
    1987
    © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
    Used by permission

     

     

    NRW-Forum Kultur und Wirtschaft
    Ehrenhof 2, 40479 Düsseldorf
    Phone: +49 (0)211 – 89 266 90

    Opening hours:
    Tuesday – Sunday 11.00 am – 6.00 pm
    Closed Mondays

    NRW-Forum Dusseldorf website

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    Text: ‘Across’ by Peter Handke

    July 2019

     

    As a follow up to my posting ‘How to Understand the Light on a Landscape’ by Pablo Helguera, my friend and photographer Ian Lobb sent me this text from the first few pages of the novel Across by Peter Handke (1986). In the novel the narrator, Andreas Loser, knocks down a stranger in the street, takes a leave of absence from his post as teacher of ancient languages and leaves his family to move to a drab flat in a housing development.

    “Handke’s novel tells the story of a quiet, organised classics teacher named Andreas Loser. One night, on the way to his regularly scheduled card game, he passes a tree that has been defaced by a swastika. Impulsively yet deliberately, he tracks down the defacer and kills him. With this act, Loser has crossed an invisible threshold, and will be stuck in this secular purgatory until he can confess his crime.”

    Text from Amazon website


    In this wonderful piece of text the first paragraph sets the scene before one of the most inspired pieces of writing, a meditation on story, on nothing, on light, joy and emptiness – a story of “Emptiness” that is fullness.

    Marcus

     

     

     

    Text from the novel Across by Peter Handke

     

     

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    Text: ‘How to Understand the Light on a Landscape’ (2005) by Pablo Helguera

    July 2010

     

    I have managed to track down the artist and author Pablo Helguera (after I quoted his words in the review on the work of Jill Orr) and obtain permission to publish his wonderful text How to Understand the light on a Landscape taken from a video work of 2005.

    Many, many thankx to Pablo Helguera for allowing my to publish the text and photographs below. The permission is truly appreciated. The text is beautiful, insightful – a must for any artist who wishes to understand the condition of light on a landscape.

    Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image. Text and photographs © Pablo Helguera

     

     

    “‘How to Understand the Light on a Landscape’ (video, 15 min., 2005) is a work that simulates a scientific documentary about light to discuss the experiential aspects of light as triggered by memory. The images and text below, taken from the video, are part of the book published by the Institute of Cultural Inquiry, entitled Searching for Sebald: Photography After W.G. Sebald edited by Lise Patt, 2007, pp. 110-119.”

     

    'How to Understand the Light on a Landscape' (2005) by Pablo Helguera

     

     

    “To understand is to forget about loving.”

    Fernando Pessoa

     

    For Luis Ignacio Helguera Soiné (1926-2005)

     

    LIGHT is understood as the electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength that is visible to the eye. Yet, the precise nature of light, and the way it affects matter, is one of the key questions of modern physics.

    Due to wave-particle duality, light simultaneously exhibits properties of both waves and particles that affect a physical space. There are many sources of light. A body at a given temperature will emit a characteristic spectrum known as black body radiation. The conjunction of a body present in the landscape, along with the interaction of the light in the environment, produces an effect that in modern psychology we describe as experience.

    The conjunction of a random site, the accumulated data in the body’s memory that is linked to emotion, and the general behaviour of light form experience. Experience is triggered by light, but not exclusively by the visible light of the electromagnetic spectrum. What the human eye is incapable to perceive is absorbed by other sensory parts of the body, which contribute to the perception that light causes an effect that goes beyond the merely visual.

    In our life span, we witness only a few limited emission incidents of light that intersect with spontaneous receptivity of memory in specific places. They happen selectively and in rapid sequences, at night, when a door opens, when we are very young, when we drop off someone at the airport. They all, however, are inscribed by the behaviour of light. As we age and our receptivity declines, our eyes and body become denser material through which there is a reduction of the speed of light, known as a decline in the refractive index of memory.

    The extent of the breeding behaviour of EXPERIENTIAL LIGHT is determined by the amount of cyclical phenomena we have experienced, such as the slight humidity that signals the transition of spring into summer. The refractive index of memory is mostly marked by the unusually happy or sad periods of our lives, and the slow decline that gradually dominates our perception. Forgetfulness gradually inhibits the experience of light, and cannot be reversed.

     

    'How to Understand the Light on a Landscape' (2005) by Pablo Helguera

     

    The glow of heaviness, commonly known as SOMBER LIGHT, appears in urban solitude and often towards the end of the day. It is a particularly cruel light to experience, as it stimulates attractive visions, like the singing of two women on a radiant evening but it then reveals hidden anxieties that we may have about the end of things, as Homer describes the fatal singing of the mermaids.

    HOME LIGHT is too familiar to be seen. It is the kind of light that we first saw when we were born and we always recognize, but often take for granted. Home light is highly volatile light, and it often vanishes when it is named, as a dream that ends when we dream that we are dreaming. There is no point in explaining this light, because it is too familiar to the owner and too alien to all others. Yet a high experiential index is evident when it’s there, ready to envelop us when we encounter it again wherever we go. We can only know that we all have this kind of light in ourselves, as if in our pockets, ready to come out at a critical moment.

    There is the shining of large breath, full of itself, that enters with grandeur into a landscape, uninvited, taking over the logic of everything, promoting the conjunction of belief and fragility. It creates mythologies, and the belief that there is something greater than us in a time that is ungraspable or far larger than our minuscule time in this world.

    There is also a glow known as GHOST LIGHT that can only be seen, like some apparitions, in photographs, especially the snapshots taken by those who went through a long trip or extenuating circumstances in their lives, such as returning from a bloody war, escaping hunger and threat. It expresses an image of lonely liberty, where all is in order but there is little that can be enjoyed with that order, as if what happened before had affected the future of it all. It functions like a Swiss clock, harmonious but predictable.

     

    There is the light of the deathbed,
    that lingers on for a long time after the incident,
    and often takes the appearance of a rainy day

     

    There is the LIGHT OF THE DEATHBED, that lingers on for a long time after the incident, and often takes the appearance of a rainy day, even many years later, like the widow that will hold on to wearing black. It is a refracting light, the light of the permanent finality of the moment that often creates the impression of letting us know something that we didn’t know, just like an unopened letter found after many years. Its extremely old waves appear to have a cool breeze, as if ready to inspire a Flemish painting.

    Those who once read long 19th century novels often recognize RAIN LIGHT. It is often seen from a train in motion, when it is arriving to a station that is not our destination, and yet we feel there is something we are leaving behind, as if we had indeed lived another life, or had developed a sense of belonging to those who we see getting off.

    But there is also a tired glow on a cloudy summer afternoon right before or during lunchtime, one that emerges after strenuous work by others but that we see when we are doing nothing, or when we are resting. It is also similar to the light of the movie matinee that we see with the fascination of remembering that it is still daytime after we came from darkness. It also reminds us of food we ate a long time ago and the extinct products and fashions from the time when we were kids.

     

    'How to Understand the Light on a Landscape' (2005) by Pablo Helguera

     

    There is a PROTECTIVE LIGHT that reminds us of the womb, of the time where we were completely protected. This light inspires endless nostalgic yearning to attain that protection again. Our obsession with protective light prevents us from growing and makes us fear change. We wish we could be like that woman in a distant small city who was born, married, and died on the same street. It is true that no velocity and amount of experience can compare with the accumulated placement of experience in a single spot. But due to the impossibility of being able to replace protective light, these attempts derive in the light of the tourist, taking the same image all around the world, seeking comfort in every place when in reality there is no comfort to be had.

    Another source of satisfaction is the working light that signals many events that take place on an everyday basis, like business lunches in city cafeterias, like going to the post office, like all the activity proper of the midday urban sprawl, a dynamic, powerful light, with the enthusiasm and perhaps strange mixture of happiness and melancholy we used to feel in school when we were finally off for vacations but we would not get to see our high school crush for the rest of the summer. We will know how to recognize this sunlight when we see it slowly crawl through the walls until it disappears completely.

    There is of course the ARTIFICIAL LIGHT. It is a light for waiting, a transitory light that creates the impression that the actual moment doesn’t exist but rather a joining of procedures that take us from one place to another, which we call the obligations of life.

     

    We wish we could be like that woman in a distant small city
    who was born, married, and died on the same street.
    It is true that no velocity and amount of experience can compare with the accumulated placement of experience in a single spot.

     

    ARTIFICIAL LIGHT crawls into our lives, and we tend to also see it on the outdoors, sometimes exchanging it mentally for real sunlight. It makes us feel that every place is the same to us because we are the same. Under artificial light, the strangers that we see in the street soon start looking eerily familiar to us.

    This is the LIGHT OF THE TRULY BLIND, where unreality is a perfectly kept lawn, an undisturbed peace, and an organized tour to an exotic location where nothing happens. This light constructed by official human communication is an empty airport, a constant waiting room full of scheduled departures with no one in the planes and plenty of flight simulations.

    There is the LIGHT OF ADOLESCENCE, a blinding light that is similar to the one we feel when we are asleep facing the sun and we feel its warmth but don’t see it directly. Sometimes it marks the unplace, perhaps the commonality of all places or perhaps, for those who are pessimists, the unplaceness of every location.

     

    'How to Understand the Light on a Landscape' (2005) by Pablo Helguera

     

    There is a SUNDAY LIGHT, profoundly euphoric and unsettling, both because it reminds us of leisure but also of Monday’s obligations; it is the one we used to read comic strips with, while eating pancakes outdoors, or go to the store to buy coffee or watch the sports on TV, a trustworthy companion light that seems to last, creating clear shadows and warmth as well as a confident sense of the present – it is the only light that we enjoy regardless of our age and never want it to ever go away.

    There is a HOTEL LIGHT, of transitory nature, that generates unexpected and intense responses especially to those whose happier memories have taken place at the garden or swimming pool of a hotel. It often talks of fantasy worlds that are real just because we let ourselves fall into the fantasy they offer, parentheses of light that can well be captured in a snapshot.

    Sometimes we experience the LIGHT OF THE LAST DAY, a kind of light that takes form during farewells or moments of consciousness when we know that what we are looking at that moment shall never be repeated, and that years from now we will be recalling that moment. Moments of memory that are memories even in the moments when we live them.

    There is USED LIGHT, light that has been lived by others, and we are always left with the impression that we missed something important, like listening only to the very end of a certain conversation, our constant expectation of a phone call that never arrived, or the obsessive possibilities of an unrequited love.

    Or the NARRATED LIGHT, the one that we only know by description and think that we recognize it when we see it when it may always be an impossibility to get a glimpse of its wilderness. It is a light of induced learning, as when we inherit memories from others to the point of believing that they are memories of our own.

    And it is in this light where that which is the farthest can suddenly appear very familiar, even if we are in a medieval museum entering into the least observed gallery, when we feel that we share a private life with the people from that time and we see them in our dreams as hybrid beings of flesh and the corroded wood of a sculpted saint.

     

    Sometimes we experience the light of the last day …
    Moments of memory that are memories
    even in the moments when we live them.

     

    With this light we can also recall the thousands of pictures taken by our grandparents during their honeymoon in Europe, landscapes and sunsets accumulated in tin boxes for half a century.

    Few are able to perceive TRANSPARENT LIGHT, a light that hurts for unknown reasons, perhaps because it is so clear that it allows us to see too much or because it stings our consciousness, awakening images that we may prefer to forget.

     

    'How to Understand the Light on a Landscape' (2005) by Pablo Helguera

     

    And on the other end of the spectrum, there is the AFTER LIGHT, a light of the past, which are echoes from past experiences so intense that they sometimes appear in front of us in the form of unexpected shadows. They hide on clear days under the roofs of houses. It is believed to be the same light seen by people we knew many years ago that survives like a message in a bottle, but always in a precarious way and often vanishes into thin air.

    Light likes to introduce trouble and ask questions, forcing us to reconcile our thoughts and decide how we feel – our mind makes photosynthesis out of its particles and we feel we grow or diminish with it, going to sleep when there is no light, waking up when the light comes back.

    But ultimately, and given that our perception is generally faulty and dependent on random associations, it is useless to try to categorize the different species of light on the basis of personal experience as we do here, or to speak about a zoology of light that results from the conjunction of landscapes and moving observers.

     

    There is no spirit, but rather a weak string of perceptions,
    a line of coded language that writes a book to be read only by ourselves, and be given meaning by ourselves and to ourselves.

     

    The intersection of our body with the light and the landscape and the coded form of language that we have to construct by ourselves and explain to ourselves is our daily ordeal, and we are free to choose to ignore and live without it, because there is nothing we can do with this language other than talking to ourselves. There is no point in trying to explain it to others because it is not designed to be this way, other than remaining a remote, if equivalent, language.

    Some for that reason prefer to construct empty spaces with nondescript imagery, and thus be free of the seductive and nostalgic undecipherability of the landscape and the light.

    Or we may choose to openly embrace the darkness of light, and thus let ourselves through the great gates of placehood, where we can finally accept the unexplainable concreteness of our moments for what they are. There is no spirit, but rather a weak string of perceptions, a line of coded language that writes a book to be read only by ourselves, and be given meaning by ourselves and to ourselves.

    When we know that we can’t truly speak about what we experience, we now arrive to the edge of our understanding and the edge of our meanings. While on the other side we may encounter others to talk to, they are much farther than we think, while we are firmly set in here, holding on perhaps to one single image of which we may only continue to hope to decode its meaning up to the very last day when our memory serves our mind, and our mind serves our feelings.

    Text from the Pablo Helguera Archive website 2nd October 2005 [Online] Cited 28/10/2019

     

     

    Pablo Helguera Archive website

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    Exhibition: ‘Open Landscape’ at Galerie Wagner + Partner, Berlin

    Exhibition dates: 21st May – 31st July 2010

    Artists: Peter Dreher, Friederike Jokisch, Josef Schulz, Thomas Wrede

     

    Many thankx to Cai Wagner and Galerie Wagner + Partner for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting.

    All works: © the artist, courtesy Galerie Wagner + Partner. Please click on the photograph for a larger version of the image.

     

    Peter Dreher (German, b. 1932) 'Schöne Tage im Hochschwarzwald' 1999 from the exhibition 'Open Landscape' at Galerie Wagner + Partner, Berlin, May - July, 2010

     

    Peter Dreher (German, b. 1932)
    Schöne Tage im Hochschwarzwald
    1999
    Oil on canvas

     

    Friederike Jokisch (German, b. 1981) 'Domizil' 2009 from the exhibition 'Open Landscape' at Galerie Wagner + Partner, Berlin, May - July, 2010

     

    Friederike Jokisch (German, b. 1981)
    Domizil
    2009
    Pastel

     

    Josef Schulz (Polish, b. 1966) 'Felswand #3' 2008 from the exhibition 'Open Landscape' at Galerie Wagner + Partner, Berlin, May - July, 2010

     

    Josef Schulz (Polish, b. 1966)
    Felswand #3
    2008
    Type C print Diasec

     

     

    Nature became landscape long ago. Since the Romantic period landscape has furthermore been an aesthetic position. But what is landscape for the modern human being? The thematic exhibition “Open Landscape” at the Galerie Wagner + Partner provides a juxtaposition of multigenerational photographic and pictorial approaches to this question. The reference point for all participating artists is the real landscape.

    The works of Thomas Wrede and Joseph Schulz increase their charm through friction between photorealistic representation extended through staging and intervention. Wrede, in his series entitled “Real Landscapes” combines the natural beauty of landscape with constructed miniature models. The landscapes photographed in this way appear seductively plausible and exaggerate the romantic projection.

    Schulz similarly aims for an aesthetic exaggeration and idealisation through digital intervention in his nature photographs of the series “Terraform”. Through the elimination of human traces he reconstructs the lost primordial state of nature and creates people’s “internal” images of the landscape.

    Similarly originating from actual landscape, Peter Dreher’s “Schwarzwaldlandschaft” (Black Forest Landscape) appears idealistic. It almost appears to be based on the tradition of “Heimatmalerei” (patriotic landscape painting). Viewed in close proximity however, the picture’s elements are ordered according to days and time. Each single picture documents what the artist saw and captured at precisely this point in time. Only when viewed as a whole an abstract picture of landscape as space-time-construct appears.

    The central theme of Neo Rauch-student Friederike Jokisch is the landscape beyond the established idyll. Her large format pastel paintings make the process of transformation from nature to landscape tangible. In striking pictures “landscape” is demystified and instead ruptures and alienations between culture and nature become central themes.

    The exhibition consciously poses more questions, attempts to find fewer answers. At the same time it continues the theme of the previous exhibition “The Nightingale’s Secret Garden”.

    Text from the Galerie Wagner + Partner website [Online] Cited 14/07/2010 no longer available online

     

    Thomas Wrede (German, b. 1963) 'Drive In Theatre' 2009

     

    Thomas Wrede (German, b. 1963)
    Drive In Theatre
    2009
    Lambda Print Diasec

     

    Thomas Wrede (German, b. 1963) 'In the Tertiary Valley' 2008

     

    Thomas Wrede (German, b. 1963)
    In the Tertiary Valley
    2008
    Lambda Print Diasec

     

    'Open Landscape' exhibition view at Galerie Wagner + Partner, 2010

     

    Open Landscape exhibition view at Galerie Wagner + Partner, 2010

     

     

    Galerie Wagner + Partner

    This gallery has now closed.

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    Review: ‘Jill Orr: Vision’ at Jenny Port Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne

    Exhibition dates: 2nd June – 3rd July, 2010

     

    Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952) 'Megan' 2009 from the exhibition Review: 'Jill Orr: Vision' at Jenny Port Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne, June - July, 2010

     

    Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952)
    Megan
    2009

     

     

    A huge gallery crawl on Wednesday last saw me take in exhibitions at Nellie Castan Gallery (Malleus Melficarum: strong sculptural work by James and Eleanor Avery; Broken Canon: vibrant mixed media collages by Marc Freeman); Anita Traverso Gallery (Peristereonas: sculptures, photographs and mixed media by Barry Thompson); John Buckley Gallery (Perpetua by Emma can Leest, beautiful cut paper works; rather mundane paintings by Christian Lock); Karen Woodbury Gallery (Every breath you take: wonderful galaxy-like paintings, perhaps as seen by the Hubble telescope, with a geometric / cellular base by Lara Merrett); The Centre for Contemporary Photography (Event horizon: a group exhibition that “engages the horizon as a means to establish a physical locality with relation to the Earth’s surface and more broadly to the universe of which it is a miniscule component.” An exhibition that left me rather cold); and ACCA (Towards an elegant solution by Peter Cripps, again a singularly unemotional engagement with the precise, contained work: interesting for how the work explores spatial environments but in an abstract, intellectual way).

    The stand out work from this mammoth day was Jill Orr: Vision at Jenny Port Gallery. Simply put, it was the strongest, most direct, most emotionally powerful work that I saw all day.

    Dr Marcus Bunyan


    Many thankx to Amelia Douglas and Jenny Port Gallery for allowing me to publish the photographs in this posting.

     

     

    Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952) 'Megan' 2009 from the exhibition Review: 'Jill Orr: Vision' at Jenny Port Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne, June - July, 2010

     

    Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952)
    Megan
    2009

     

     

    Jill Orr’s new participatory performances are photographs of children from Avoca Primary School painted with white clay from the area, displayed in pairs. The children are photographed once with eyes open, once with eyes closed. Orr asked the children to imagine their future life when they had their eyes closed. The key to the work is a group photograph of the ghostly children outside the primary school where everyone is isolated from each other (see photograph below).

    “White faces loom up out of a dark ground, described by Orr as a void. On the surface these portraits are finely crafted, the skin of masked face becomes one with the digital file to create a facial landscape. The materiality of the face and the photographic file are exposed for the viewer. Titling the series ‘vision’ Orr ventures into a ‘haptic visuality’ where “vision itself can be tactile, as though one were touching a film with one’s eyes.”


    From the catalogue essay by Professor Anne Marsh, Monash University

     

     

    In the performance, the ritual of being photographed, Orr instructs the children who are placed under the surveillance of the camera. “We are confronted with the pose, the conscious composition of the image to be photographed, the inherent constructedness of the posed photograph.”1 The child assumes the pose by which they wish to be memorialised. The gaze (of the camera, of the viewer) is returned / or not in this spectacle.

    Something happens when we look at these photographs. The text of the photographs becomes intertextual, producing as Barthes understands a “plurality of meanings and signifying / interpretive gestures that escape the reduction of knowledge to fixed, monological re-presentations, or presences.”2 This is because, as Foucault observes, texts “are caught up in a system of references to … other texts, other sentences: it is a node within a network …  Its unity is variable and relative.”3

    The photographs invite us to share not only the mapping of the surface of the skin and the mapping of place (the history of white people living on the land in country Australia) and identity but the sharing of inner light, the light of the imaginary as well – and in this observation the images become unstable, open to reinterpretation. The distance between viewer and subject is transcended through an innate understanding of inner and outer light. The photographs seduce, meaning, literally, to be led astray.

    As American photographer Minor White, who photographed in meditation hoping for a revelation in spirit though connection between person > subject > camera > negative > print, observes in one of his Three Canons

    When the image mirrors the man
    And the man mirrors the subject
    Something might take over
    4


    Here the power of the photographer acting in isolation, the modernist tenet of authorship, is overthrown. In it’s place, “White supposes a relationship with subject that is a two way street: by granting the world some role in its own representation we create a photograph that is not so much a product solely of individual actions as it is the result of a negotiation in which the world and all its subjects might participate.”5 The autobiography of a soul born in the age of mechanical reproduction. This is the power of these photographs for something intangible within the viewer does take over. I found myself looking at the photographs again and again for small nuances, the detail of hairs on the head, the imagining of what the person was thinking about with their eyes closed: their future, their fears, their hopes, the ‘active imagination as a means to visualise sustainable futures’ (Orr, 2010).

    These photographs seem to lengthen or protract time through this haptic touching of inner light. As Pablo Helguera observes in his excellent essay How To Understand the Light on a Landscape that examines different types of light (including experiental light, somber light, home light, ghost light, the light of the deathbed, protective light, artificial light, working light, Sunday light, used light, narrated light, the last light of day, hotel light, transparent light, after light, the light of the truly blind and the light of adolescence but not, strangely, inner light)

    “Experience is triggered by light, but not exclusively by the visible light of the electro-magnetic spectrum. What the human eye is incapable to perceive is absorbed by other sensory parts of the body, which contribute to the perception that light causes an effect that goes beyond the merely visual …

    There is the LIGHT OF ADOLESCENCE, a blinding light that is similar to the one we feel when we are asleep facing the sun and we feel its warmth but don’t see it directly. Sometimes it marks the unplace, perhaps the commonality of all places or perhaps, for those who are pessimists, the unplaceness of every location …

    We may choose to openly embrace the darkness of light, and thus let ourselves through the great gates of placehood, where we can finally accept the unexplainable concreteness of our moments for what they are.”6


    In the imagination of the darkness that lies behind these children’s closed eyes is the commonality of all places, a shared humanity of memory, of dreams. These photographs testify to our presence and ask us to decide how we feel about our life, our place and the relation to that (un)placeness where we must all, eventually, return.

    Dr Marcus Bunyan

     

    1/ Feiereisen, Florence and Pope, Daniel. “True Fiction and Fictional Truths: The Enigmatic in Sebald’s Use of Images in The Emigrants” in Patt, Lise (ed.,). Searching for Sebald: Photography after W.G. Sebald. Los Angeles: The Institute of Cultural Inquiry, 2007, p. 175.

    2/ Barthes, Roland. “From Work to Text” in Image, Music, Text. trans. S. Heath. New York: Hill and Wang, 1977 quoted in Thumlert, Kurt. Intervisuality, Visual Culture, and Education. [Online] Cited 10/08/2006. www.forkbeds.com/visual-pedagogy.htm (link no longer active)

    3/ Foucault, Michel. The Order of Things: An Archeology of the Human Sciences. New York: Vintage, 1973 quoted in Thumlert, Kurt. Intervisuality, Visual Culture, and Education. [Online] Cited 10/08/2006. www.forkbeds.com/visual-pedagogy.htm (link no longer active)

    4/ White, Minor. Mirrors, Messages and Manifestations. Aperture, 1969

    5/ Leo, Vince. Review of Mirrors, Messages and Manifestations on the Amazon website [Online] Cited 26/06/2010

    6/ Helguera, Pablo. “How to Understand the Light on a Landscape,” in Patt, Lise (ed.,). Searching for Sebald: Photography after W.G. Sebald. Los Angeles: The Institute of Cultural Inquiry, 2007, pp. 110-119

       

       

      Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952) 'Jacinta' 2009 from the exhibition Review: 'Jill Orr: Vision' at Jenny Port Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne, June - July, 2010

      Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952) 'Jacinta' 2009 from the exhibition Review: 'Jill Orr: Vision' at Jenny Port Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne, June - July, 2010

       

      Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952)
      Jacinta
      2009

       

      Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952) 'Avoca Primary School' 2009

       

      Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952)
      Avoca Primary School
      2009

       

       

      Jill Orr’s work centres on issues of the psycho-social and environmental where she draws on land and identities. Grappling with the balance and discord that exists between the human spirit, art and nature, Orr has, since the 1970s, delighted, shocked and moved audiences through her performance installations.

      This current body of work involved children from the Avoca Primary School as active participants in Orr’s performance for the camera. The result is a series of high contrast black and white photographic portraits, which are shown as diptychs portraying the different states of seeing both outwardly and inwardly. One of each pair frames the child looking directly at the camera. The gaze meets the viewer. Who is looking at whom? The second captures the child whose eyes are closed. An inner world is intimated, but not accessible to the viewer.

      In terms of the ‘gaze’, these works turn to the child as conveyer of the imaginary engaging both within and without. “I have found that creative acts require the visionary sensibilities of both the inner and outer world to operate simultaneously, consciously and unconsciously as dual aspects of the one action. In this instance the action is that of active imagination as a means to visualise sustainable futures.” (Jill Orr, 2010). The portraits also reflect the present relationship to place that is etched into the faces of youth as already kissed by the harsh Australian sun.

      Avoca is one of many townships that has been socially, economically and environmentally affected by drought and climate change. The portraits are created against this background.

      Text from the Jenny Port Gallery website [Online] Cited 26/06/2010 no longer available online

       

      Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952) 'Vision' installation photograph at Jenny Port Gallery

      Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952) 'Vision' installation photograph at Jenny Port Gallery

       

      Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952)
      Vision installation photographs at Jenny Port Gallery
      June 2010
      Photos: Marcus Bunyan

       

       

      Jenny Port Gallery

      This gallery has now closed.

      Jill Orr website

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      Exhibition: ‘Detroit Experiences: Robert Frank Photographs, 1955’ at Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit

      Exhibition dates: 3rd March – 4th July, 2010

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Assembly Plant, Detroit' 1955 from the exhibition 'Detroit Experiences: Robert Frank Photographs, 1955' at Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, March - July, 2010

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Assembly Plant, Detroit
      1955
      Gelatin silver print
      8 7/8 × 13 1/8 inches (22.5 × 33.3cm)
      Founders Society Purchase, Coville Photographic Fund
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Many thankx to Pamela Marcil and the Detroit Institute of Arts for allowing me to reproduce the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

      Marcus

       

       

      “I am always looking outside, trying to look inside, trying to say something that is true. But maybe nothing is really true. Except what’s out there. And what’s out there is constantly changing.”


      Robert Frank, 1985

       

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Belle Isle' 1955 from the exhibition 'Detroit Experiences: Robert Frank Photographs, 1955' at Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, March - July, 2010

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Belle Isle – Detroit
      1955, printed between 1966-1968
      Gelatin silver print
      12 5/8 × 18 7/8 inches (32.1 × 47.9cm)
      Museum Purchase, Ernest and Rosemarie Kanzler Foundation Fund, Forum for Prints, Drawings, and Photographs Purchase Fund, and General Art Purchase Fund
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Detroit River Rouge Plant' 1955 from the exhibition 'Detroit Experiences: Robert Frank Photographs, 1955' at Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, March - July, 2010

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Detroit River Rouge Plant
      1955, printed 1970s
      Gelatin silver print
      9 1/8 × 13 7/8 inches (23.2 × 35.2cm)
      Founders Society Purchase, Coville Photographic Fund
      © Robert Frank. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Drive-In Movie, Detroit' 1955

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Drive-In Movie, Detroit
      1955, printed 1977
      Gelatin silver print
      8 1/4 × 12 1/2 inches (21 × 31.8cm)
      Founders Society Purchase, Tina and Lee Hills Graphic Arts Fund
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts.

       

       

      Detroit Experiences: Robert Frank Photographs, 1955 showcases more than 50 rare and many never-before-seen black-and-white photographs taken in Detroit by legendary artist Robert Frank. The exhibition will be on view at the Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA) March 3 – July 4, 2010. The exhibition is free with museum admission.

      In 1955 and 1956 Robert Frank traveled the U.S. taking photographs for his groundbreaking book The Americans, published in 1958. With funding from a prestigious Guggenheim grant, he set out to create a large visual record of America, and Detroit was one of his early stops. Inspired by autoworkers, the cars they made, along with local lunch counters, drive-in movies and public parks such as Belle Isle, Frank transformed everyday experiences of Detroiters into an extraordinary visual statement about American life.

      According to Frank, The Americans included “things that are there, anywhere, and everywhere … a town at night, a parking lot, the man who owns three cars and the man who owns none … the dream of grandeur, advertising, neon lights … gas tanks, post offices and backyards …” The exhibition includes nine Detroit images that were published in The Americans, as well as, for the first time, an in-depth body of work representative of Frank’s Detroit, its working-class culture and automotive industry.

      Frank was drawn to Detroit partly by a personal fascination with the automobile, but also saw its presence and effect on American culture as essential to his series. Frank was one of the few photographers allowed to take photographs at the famous Ford Motor Company River Rouge factory, where he was amazed to witness the transformation of raw materials into fully assembled cars. In a letter to his wife he wrote, “Ford is an absolutely fantastic place … this one is God’s factory and if there is such a thing – I am sure that the devil gave him a helping hand to build what is called Ford’s River Rouge Plant.” Frank spent two days taking pictures at the Ford factory, photographing workers on the assembly lines and manning machines by day, and following them as they ventured into the city at night.

      Whether in the disorienting surroundings of a massive factory or during the solitary and alienating moments of individuals in parks and on city streets, the Swiss-born photographer looked beneath the surface of life in the U.S. and found a culture that challenged his perceptions and popular notions of the American Dream. Further accentuating his view of America, Frank developed an unconventional photographic style innovative and controversial in its time. Photographing quickly, Frank sometimes tilted and blurred compositions, presenting people and their surroundings in fleeting and fragmentary moments with an unsentimental eye.

      Beat poet Jack Kerouac expressed the complex nature of the artist and his work in a passage from his introduction to The Americans stating, “Robert Frank, Swiss, unobtrusive, nice, with that little camera that he raises and snaps with one hand he sucked a sad poem right out of America onto film, taking rank among the tragic poets of the world.”

      Born in 1924 in Zurich, Switzerland, Frank emigrated to the U.S. in 1947. He worked on assignments for magazines from 1948–53, but his photographic books garnered the highest acclaim. After publishing The Americans, he began filmmaking and directed the early experimental masterpiece Pull My Daisy, in collaboration with Jack Kerouac in 1959. Frank continues to work in both film and photography and has been the subject of many traveling exhibitions in recent years. The National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. established Frank’s photographic archive in 1990 and organised his first traveling retrospective, “Moving Out, in 1995” as well as a 2009 exhibition “Looking In: Robert Frank’s “The Americans”.” Frank lived in Mabou, Nova Scotia, and New York City with his wife, artist June Leaf.

      Press release from the Detroit Institute of Arts website [Online] Cited 24/06/2019 no longer available online

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Untitled' 1955

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Untitled
      1955, printed c. 1970s
      Gelatin silver print
      10 3/4 × 15 7/8 inches (27.3 × 40.3cm)
      Founders Society Purchase with funds from Founders Junior Council
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Ford River Rouge Plant' 1955, printed c. 1970s

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Ford River Rouge Plant
      1955, printed c. 1970s
      Gelatin silver print
      13 13/16 × 9 1/8 inches (35.1 × 23.2cm)
      Founders Society Purchase, Coville Photographic Fund
      © Robert Frank. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, b. 1924) 'Assembly Plant, Ford, Detroit' 1955

       

      Robert Frank  (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Assembly Plant, Ford, Detroit
      1955, printed c. 1960s
      Gelatin silver print
      12 7/8 × 8 1/2 inches (32.7 × 21.6cm)
      Founders Society Purchase, Coville Photographic Fund
      © Robert Frank. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Drugstore, Detroit' 1955

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Drugstore, Detroit
      1955, printed c. 1960s
      Gelatin silver print
      23 1/4 × 15 3/4 inches (59.1 × 40cm)
      Founders Society Purchase, with funds from the Founders Junior Council
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Detroit' 1955

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Detroit
      1955, printed c. 1960s
      Gelatin silver print
      9 1/16 × 13 1/2 inches (23 × 34.3cm)
      Founders Society Purchase, Coville Photographic Fund
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Detroit - Belle Isle' 1955

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Belle Isle – Detroit
      1955, printed between 1960 and 1979
      Gelatin silver print
      12 1/2 × 18 3/4 inches (31.8 × 47.6cm)
      Museum Purchase, Ernest and Rosemarie Kanzler Foundation Fund, Forum for Prints, Drawings, and Photographs Purchase Fund, and General Art Purchase Fund
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Rodeo - Detroit' 1955

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Rodeo – Detroit
      1955, printed 1960s
      Gelatin silver print
      6 1/2 × 9 7/8 inches (16.5 × 25.1cm)
      Museum Purchase, Ernest and Rosemarie Kanzler Foundation Fund, Forum for Prints, Drawings, and Photographs Purchase Fund, and General Art Purchase Fund
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      In 1955, Swiss-born photographer Robert Frank traveled across the United States photographing how Americans live, work, and spend their leisure time. Detroit was a critical stop on his itinerary, as the Motor City was world renowned for its automobiles along with its factories and labor force. Frank spent several days in Detroit at its legendary Ford Motor Company Rouge Plant and visited dime-store lunch counters, drive-ins, and public parks as well. He may have found Stetson-wearing spectators at a local rodeo an unlikely and uncharacteristic subject for Detroit – a large, industrial, midwestern city. Nonetheless he included Rodeo – Detroit, in addition to eight other photographs taken in the city, as part of the 83 images found in his ground-breaking photo book The Americans from 1958. The book brought Frank great acclaim for his critical commentary on America during the boom years following World War II.

      From Bulletin of the Detroit Institute of Arts 89 (2015)

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Detroit' 1956

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Detroit
      1956
      Gelatin silver print
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

       

      Detroit Institute of Arts
      5200 Woodward Avenue
      Detroit, Michigan 48202
      Main Line: 313.833.7900

      Opening hours:
      Monday Closed
      Tuesday – Thursday 9am – 4pm
      Friday 9am – 9pm
      Saturday – Sunday 10am – 5pm

      Detroit Institute of Arts website

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      Sculpture: ‘Drawing Water’ (2010) by Fredrick White

      June 2010

       

      Unknown photographer. ''Drawing Water' by Frederick White' 2010

       

      Unknown photographer
      Drawing Water by Frederick White
      2010

       

       

      Australian sculptor Fredrick White, has been commissioned to create two public sculptures in Western Queensland. The first has been completed at Thargomindah (see Google map), a town located 1014 km west of Brisbane and was commissioned by artplusplace and Thargomindah Regional Council. In a small town of 250 people this is the town’s first public sculpture.

      “The town’s one claim to fame is its artesian bore. The bore, which lies 2 km out of town on the Noccundra road, was drilled in 1891 and by 1893, having drilled to a depth of 795 metres, the water came to the surface. It was then that the town successfully attempted a unique experiment. The pressure of the bore water was used drive a generator which supplied the town’s electricity. Enthusiasts have described this as Australia’s first hydro-electricity scheme. The system operated until 1951. Today the bore still provides the town’s water supply. The water reaches the surface at 84°C.”1


      The work Drawing Water (2010) addresses the need for water in such an arid location and the numerous bores that are sunk around the town to draw water to the surface. The earth is reflected in the sky and the sky in the earth in the central polished stainless steel disks (as friend Perry observes, like a tunnel connecting earth and heaven). A forest of bore pipes surround the central platform. Of the work Fred says:

      Drawing Water speaks of our connection to the Earth, specifically the Great Artesian Basin and the bores that provide the only continuous source of water throughout much of inland Australia. The 52 galvanised poles symbolise not only our year round need for water but are also as a reminder of how extensively taped the artesian water is.”

      The next commission is at Blackall in Western Queensland (see Google map). A drawing of the work Lifespan (2010), which is 8 metres long, is at the bottom of the posting. Blackall already contains public sculptures by William Eicholtz (Towners Call – Edgar Towner V.C. Memorial (2009)) and Robert Bridgewater (Wool, Water and Wood (2008)).

      Dr Marcus Bunyan

       

      1/ Text from the Sydney Morning Herald travel website February 8, 2004 [Online] Cited 17/08/2019

       

       

      Unknown photographer. ''Drawing Water' by Frederick White' 2010

       

      Unknown photographer
      Drawing Water by Frederick White
      2010

       

      Unknown photographer. ''Drawing Water' by Frederick White' 2010 (detail)

      Unknown photographer. ''Drawing Water' by Frederick White' 2010 (detail)

      Unknown photographer. ''Drawing Water' by Frederick White' 2010 (detail)

       

      Unknown photographer
      Drawing Water by Frederick White (details)
      2010

       

      Fredrick White (Australian) 'Lifespan' (2010), drawing for commission at Blackall, Queensland

       

      Fredrick White (Australian)
      Lifespan
      2010
      Drawing for commission at Blackall, Queensland

       

       

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      Exhibition: ‘Harry Callahan: American Photographer’ at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

      Exhibition dates: 21st November 2009 – 3rd July, 2010

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor, Chicago' 1949 from the exhibition 'Harry Callahan: American Photographer' at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Nov 2009 - July 2010

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor, Chicago
      1949
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

       

      I admire the use of strong horizontals and verticals in the work of Harry Callahan and the exquisite sense of space, stillness and sensuality he creates within the image plane. A true American master. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

      Dr Marcus Bunyan


      Many thankx to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

       

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor and Barbara' 1953 from the exhibition 'Harry Callahan: American Photographer' at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Nov 2009 - July 2010

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor and Barbara
      1953
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor and Barbara, Lake Michigan' 1953 from the exhibition 'Harry Callahan: American Photographer' at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Nov 2009 - July 2010

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor and Barbara, Lake Michigan
      1953
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor and Barbara' c. 1954

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor and Barbara
      c. 1954
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor, Chicago' 1953

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor, Chicago
      1953
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Detroit' 1943

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Detroit
      1943
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

       

      The brilliant graphic sensibility of Harry Callahan (1912-1999), a major figure in American photography, is the focus of Harry Callahan: American Photographer at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA). Debuting November 21, the exhibition features approximately 40 photographs that survey the major visual themes of the artist’s career. It celebrates the Museum’s important recent acquisitions – by both purchase and gift – of Callahan’s photographs and showcases significant examples of his artistry from the collections of friends of the MFA. The many sensitive pictures that Callahan made of his wife Eleanor, his depictions of passers-by on the street, his carefully composed landscapes and close-ups from nature, and experimental darkroom abstractions reveal a wide-ranging talent that was enormously influential.

      “Harry Callahan was one of the most innovative photographers working in America in the mid 20th-century,” said Malcolm Rogers, Ann and Graham Gund Director of the MFA. “His elegantly spare, introspective photographs demonstrate his lyricism and the originality of his sense of design.”

      The Detroit-born photographer, whose career spanned six decades, became interested in the camera in the late 1930s while working as a Chrysler Corporation shipping clerk. He was largely self-taught, and attracted admiration early on for his originality. By 1946, Callahan was hired as a photography instructor by the Hungarian-born artist László Moholy-Nagy for the Institute of Design, a Bauhaus-inspired school of art and design in Chicago. In 1961, Callahan was invited to head the photography program at the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), where he was based until retiring to Atlanta two decades later.

      “Harry Callahan’s approach helped shape American photography in the second half of the 20th-century,” said Anne Havinga, Estrellita and Yousuf Karsh Senior Curator of Photographs, who organised the exhibition. “His way of seeing inspired countless followers and continues to feel fresh today.”

      Callahan concentrated on a handful of personal subjects in his work, exploring each theme repeatedly throughout his career. These include portraits of his wife Eleanor, depictions of anonymous pedestrians, expressive details of the urban and natural landscape, and experimental darkroom abstractions. The MFA exhibition is organised into five themes: Eleanor, Pedestrians, Architecture, Landscapes, and Darkroom Abstractions …

      Press release from the MFA website [Online] Cited 20/06/2010. No long available online

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor' 1948

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor
      1948
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Chicago' 1950

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Chicago
      1950
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor, Chicago' 1949

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor, Chicago
      1949
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor and Barbara (baby carriage)' 1952

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor and Barbara (baby carriage)
      1952
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

       

      In 1936, around the time that Callahan began to explore photography, he married Eleanor Knapp, who served as one of his first and most frequent subjects. Callahan’s portraits of his wife, characterised by their intimate yet detached poetry, have become a landmark in the history of photography. In the photograph Eleanor (about 1948, see second photograph above), Callahan portrays his wife in a private interior setting, facing away from the camera. After the birth of their daughter Barbara in 1950, she too entered these family pictures, which capture the intimate moments of daily life as seen in the photograph, Eleanor and Barbara (1953, see photograph second from top).

      Callahan photographed the natural landscape throughout his career, focusing on its evocative forms and textures. In images such as Aix-en-Provence, France (1957), he explored the visual effects that he could create either through high contrast or closely related tonalities. Callahan also utilised a range of different experimental darkroom techniques – from photographing the beam of a flashlight in a darkened room, to developing one print from multiple negatives. Many of his multi-exposure pictures were made by superimposing images from popular culture onto studies of urban life. Callahan’s openness to experimentation was stimulating for the many students who worked with him.

      Callahan made many of his best known images during his 15 years in Chicago, where he also began his role as an influential teacher. During the 1950s, the photographer embarked on a series of close-ups of anonymous pedestrians in the streets of Chicago, most of them women. Using a 35mm camera with a pre-focused telephoto lens, he captured passersby unaware of his presence, resulting in snapshot-like images that record unsuspecting subjects absorbed in private thought or action, such as Chicago (1950, see photograph above), a close-up of a preoccupied woman’s face. Callahan returned to this theme frequently, working in both black and white and colour.

      Callahan was repeatedly drawn to architectural and urban subjects. Prior to moving to Chicago, he explored the spaces of Detroit, photographing the formal patterns he discovered there. In Detroit (1943, see photograph above), Callahan depicts a street scene, with the people in transit appearing as a pattern. He experimented with colour in these pictures as early as the 1940s, but he worked more extensively in colour later in his career, from the 1970s onward.

      Text from the Art Tatler website [Online] Cited 20/06/2010. No long available online

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Chicago' 1961

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Chicago
      1961
      Gelatin silver print
      Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Gift of Barbara and Gene Polk
      © The Estate of Harry Callahan, courtesy Pace/MacGill, NY
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor' about 1947

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor
      about 1947
      Gelatin silver print
      Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Gift of Barbara and Gene Polk
      © The Estate of Harry Callahan, courtesy Pace/MacGill, NY
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Cape Cod' 1972

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Cape Cod
      1972
      Gelatin silver print
      Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Gift of Barbara and Gene Polk
      © The Estate of Harry Callahan, courtesy Pace/MacGill, NY
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Cape Cod' 1972

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Cape Cod
      1972
      Gelatin silver print
      Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Polaroid Foundation Purchase Fund
      © The Estate of Harry Callahan, courtesy Pace/MacGill, NY
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

       

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      Exhibition: ‘European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century’, Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne

      Exhibition dates: 19th June – 10th October 2010

       

      Media opening of 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th - 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

       

      Media opening of European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century, Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

       

      A huge posting – and another ‘you saw it here first’ on Art Blart!

      A simple, spacious hang shows off some wonderfully vibrant paintings in the new Winter Masterpieces blockbuster at the NGV. The use of strong yellow and pale grey wall colour compliments the paintings. Conversely, other rooms have a dark brown and very dark grey wall colour. Some people will like the effect but I found the dark grey a little too sombre and heavy in the room dedicated to the work of Max Beckmann. Overall a fantastic range of paintings, especially those by the German Expressionists and a luminous painting by Odilon Redon. To see them in Australia is a joy to behold.

      Note on the photographs: All the photographs were taken with a timed exposure with the camera on a tripod. While this leads to ghosting as people walk through the shot it also adds a sense of the exhibition as a living entity. I find it preferable to the use of flash photography as flash destroys any ambience that the rooms possess. The photographs are in chronological order, proceeding from the beginning of the exhibition to the end.

      Dr Marcus Bunyan


      Many thankx to Dr Ted Gott, Senior Curator of International Art, Sue Coffey and all the media team and the National Gallery of Victoria for allowing me to photograph the exhibition and publish the photographs online. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image. All installation photographs © Marcus Bunyan and the National Gallery of Victoria.

      PS. Thankx to the many people who have emailed me saying that they love the photographs, especially to Sue Coffey who said the posting looked superb = it makes it all worthwhile!

       

       

      Media opening of 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th - 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

       

      Media opening of European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century, Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Installation view of Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbei's panting 'Goethe in the Roman countryside' 1787 at the exhibition 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

      Installation view of Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbei's panting 'Goethe in the Roman countryside' 1787 at the exhibition 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

       

      Installation views of Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbei’s panting Goethe in the Roman countryside 1787 at the exhibition European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century, Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria
      Photos: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein (German, 1751-1829) 'Goethe in the Roman countryside' (Goethe in der römischen Campagna) 1787 from the exhibition 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria, June - October, 2010

       

      Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein (German, 1751-1829)
      Goethe in the Roman countryside (Goethe in der römischen Campagna)
      1787
      Oil on canvas
      161.0 x 197.5cm
      Städel Museum, Frankfurt am Main
      Acquired in 1878 as a gift by Baroness Salomon von Rothschild

       

      Installation view of 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th - 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

       

      Installation view of the exhibition European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century, Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Installation view of Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbei's panting 'Goethe in the Roman countryside' 1787 at the exhibition 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

      Installation view of Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbei's panting 'Goethe in the Roman countryside' 1787 at the exhibition 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

       

      Installation views of Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbei’s panting Goethe in the Roman countryside 1787 at the exhibition European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century, Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria
      Photos: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Installation view of 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th - 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

      Installation view of 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th - 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

       

      Installation views of the exhibition European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century, Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria
      Photos: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Alfred Sisley (English, 1839-1899) 'Banks of the Seine in Autumn' 1879 (installation view) from the exhibition 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria, June - October, 2010

       

      Alfred Sisley (English, 1839-1899)
      Banks of the Seine in Autumn (installation view)
      1879
      Oil on canvas
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Installation view of Charles-Francois Daubigny (French 1817-1878) 'French Orchard at Harvest Time' (Le verger) 1876 at the exhibition 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria, June - October, 2010

      Installation view of Charles-Francois Daubigny (French 1817-1878) 'French Orchard at Harvest Time' (Le verger) 1876

       

      Installation views of Charles-Francois Daubigny (French 1817-1878) French Orchard at Harvest Time (Le verger) 1876 at the exhibition European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century, Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria
      Photos: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Charles-Francois Daubigny (French 1817-1878) 'French Orchard at Harvest Time' (Le verger) 1876 (installation view) from the exhibition 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria, June - October, 2010

       

      Charles-Francois Daubigny (French, 1817-1878)
      French Orchard at Harvest Time (Le verger) (installation view)
      1876
      Oil on canvas
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Pierre Auguste Renoir (French 1841-1919) 'After the luncheon' (La fin du déjeuner) 1879 (installation view) at the exhibition 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria, June - October, 2010

      Pierre Auguste Renoir (French 1841-1919) 'After the luncheon' (La fin du déjeuner) 1879 (installation view) at the exhibition 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria, June - October, 2010

       

      Installation views of Pierre Auguste Renoir (French 1841-1919) After the luncheon (La fin du déjeuner) 1879 at the exhibition European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century, Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria
      Photos: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Pierre Auguste Renoir (French 1841-1919) 'After the luncheon' (La fin du déjeuner) 1879

       

      Pierre Auguste Renoir (French 1841-1919)
      After the luncheon (La fin du déjeuner)
      1879
      Oil on canvas
      100.5 x 81.3cm
      Städel Museum, Frankfurt am Main
      Acquired in 1910

       

      Odilon Redon (French 1840-1916) 'Christ and the Samaritan Woman' (Le Christ et la Samaritaine) c. 1895 (installation view) at the exhibition 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

       

      Installation view of Odilon Redon (French 1840-1916) Christ and the Samaritan Woman (Le Christ et la Samaritaine) c. 1895 at the exhibition European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century, Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Odilon Redon (French 1840-1916) 'Christ and the Samaritan Woman' (Le Christ et la Samaritaine) c. 1895

       

      Odilon Redon (French, 1840-1916)
      Christ and the Samaritan Woman (Le Christ et la Samaritaine)
      c. 1895
      Oil on canvas
      64.8 x 50.0cm
      Städel Museum, Frankfurt am Main
      Acquired in 1960

       

      Installation view of the exhibition 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th - 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

       

      Installation view of the exhibition European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century, Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

       

      “The appeal of the Städel Institute lies in the tremendous energy filling that confined space. Virtually all of the great emotions that have lived in the souls of the peoples of Europe are there, and all in superb works.”

      Alfred Lichtwark, Director the Hamburg Museum, 1905

       

      One of the world’s finest collections of 19th and 20th century art is showing exclusively in Melbourne as the seventh exhibition in the hugely popular Melbourne Winter Masterpieces series at the National Gallery of Victoria.

      European Masters: Städel Museum, 19th-20th Century brings together almost 100 works by 70 artists from one of Germany’s oldest and most respected museums, the Städel Museum in Frankfurt.

      Dr Gerard Vaughan, NGV Director, said: “European Masters presents a comprehensive overview of the Städel Museum’s holdings of painting and sculpture from the last two centuries of European art. This blockbuster exhibition provides a superb survey of the key artistic movements of the time, including Realism, Impressionism and Post Impressionism, German Romanticism, Expressionism and Modernism, and French Symbolism.”

      The exhibition opens with a series of large-scale romantic German paintings, including Johann H.W. Tischbein’s iconic Goethe in the Roman Campagna from 1787. Visitors will also be treated to magnificent examples of 19th century French art from Corot and Courbet’s Realist landscapes to well-known beautiful Impressionist works by Monet, Renoir, Degas and Cézanne.

      European Masters then traces the development of German art, introducing audiences to rarely seen Realist and Symbolist masterpieces from artists such as Max Liebermann and Franz von Stuck.

      A major highlight of the exhibition is a powerful selection of German Expressionist paintings, with ten poignant works by Max Beckmann, including The synagogue in Frankfurt am Main and his powerful Double Portrait, all of which have left the Städel for the first time to be shown outside of Europe.

      The exhibition also includes a breathtaking selection of Swiss, Belgian and Dutch works by artists such as Arnold Böcklin, Fernand Khnopff and Vincent Van Gogh.

      “Exclusive to Melbourne, European Masters provides an unprecedented opportunity to see a spectacular group of masterpieces spanning the dynamic and transformative years of the 19th and 20th centuries. There is something in this exhibition for everyone, from the beauty and immediacy of French Impressionism to the raw power of German Expressionism. This is a once-in-a-lifetime chance to see superb pictures that rarely travel outside of Europe,” said Dr. Vaughan.

      Founded in 1816 by the Frankfurt financier Johann Friedrich Städel, the Städel Museum has one of the world’s finest art collections. The collection boasts 2700 paintings, 600 sculptures and over 100,000 prints and drawings documenting the development of European art and culture.

      The Melbourne Winter Masterpieces series began in 2004 with The Impressionists: Masterpieces from the Musée d’Orsay, continued in 2005 with Dutch Masters from the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, followed by Picasso in 2006, Guggenheim Collection: 1940s to Now in 2007, Art Deco 1910-1939 in 2008 and Salvador Dalí: Liquid Desire in 2009.

      This year Melbourne Winter Masterpieces includes European Masters: Städel Museum, 19th-20th Century at the NGV, and Tim Burton at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image.

      Press release from the National Gallery of Victoria website

       

      Installation view of the exhibition 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th - 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

      Installation view of Max Liebermann (German 1847-1935, lived in France 1874-78) 'Samson and Delilah' (Simson und Delila) 1901 at the exhibition 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

      Installation view of Max Liebermann (German 1847-1935, lived in France 1874-78) 'Samson and Delilah' (Simson und Delila) 1901 at the exhibition 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

       

      Installation views of Max Liebermann (German 1847-1935, lived in France 1874-78) Samson and Delilah (Simson und Delila) 1901 at the exhibition European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century, Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria
      Photos: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Max Liebermann (German 1847-1935, lived in France 1874-78) 'Samson and Delilah' (Simson und Delila) 1901

       

      Max Liebermann (German, 1847-1935, lived in France 1874-1878)
      Samson and Delilah (Simson und Delila)
      1901
      Oil on canvas
      151.2 x 212.0cm
      Städel Museum, Frankfurt am Main
      Acquired in 1910

       

      Max Klinger (German 1857-1920) 'Portrait of a Roman woman on a flat roof' (Bildnis einer Römerin auf einem Dach in Rom) 1891

       

      Max Klinger (German, 1857-1920)
      Portrait of a Roman woman on a flat roof (Bildnis einer Römerin auf einem Dach in Rom)
      1891
      Oil on canvas
      182 x 182cm
      Städel Museum, Frankfurt am Main
      Acquired in 1926 as a gift in commemoration of Walther Rathenau

       

      Installation view at left of Max Klinger (German 1857-1920) 'Portrait of a Roman woman on a flat roof' (Bildnis einer Römerin auf einem Dach in Rom) 1891 at the exhibition 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

       

      Installation view at left of Max Klinger (German 1857-1920) Portrait of a Roman woman on a flat roof (Bildnis einer Römerin auf einem Dach in Rom) 1891 at the exhibition European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century, Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Max Beckmann room, installation view of 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th - 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

      Max Beckmann room, installation view of 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th - 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

      Max Beckmann room, installation view of 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th - 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

       

      Max Beckmann room, installation view of European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century, Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria
      Photos: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Max Beckmann. 'Female dancer' (Tanzerin) c. 1935 (installation view)

       

      Max Beckmann (German 1884-1950, worked in the Netherlands 1937-1947, United States 1947-1950)
      Female dancer (Tanzerin) (installation view)
      c. 1935
      Bronze
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Installation view of 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th - 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

      Installation view of 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th - 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

      Installation view of 'European Masters: Städel Museum 19th - 20th Century', Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria

       

      Installation views of European Masters: Städel Museum 19th – 20th Century, Winter Masterpieces at the National Gallery of Victoria
      Photos: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (German 1880-1938) 'Reclining woman in a white chemise' (Liegende Frau im weiβen Hemd) 1909

       

      Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (German, 1880-1938)
      Reclining woman in a white chemise (Liegende Frau im weiβen Hemd)
      1909
      Oil on canvas
      95.0 x 121.0cm
      Städel Museum, Frankfurt am Main
      Acquired in 1950

       

       

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      Exhibition: ‘Paul Graham – a shimmer of possibility’ at Foam Fotografiemuseum, Amsterdam

      Exhibition dates: 2nd April – 16th June 2010

       

      Many thankx to Fenna Lampe and the Foam Fotografiemuseum Amsterdam for allowing me to publish the photographs in the post. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

       

      Paul Graham (English, b. 1956) 'Las Vegas, 2005' from the series 'a shimmer of possibility' from the exhibition Exhibition: 'Paul Graham - a shimmer of possibility' at Foam Fotografiemuseum, Amsterdam, April - June 2010

       

      Paul Graham (English, b. 1956)
      Las Vegas, 2005
      2005
      From the series a shimmer of possibility
      © Paul Graham

       

      Paul Graham (English, b. 1956) 'New Orleans 2004 (Woman Eating)' from the series 'a shimmer of possibility' from the exhibition Exhibition: 'Paul Graham - a shimmer of possibility' at Foam Fotografiemuseum, Amsterdam, April - June 2010

       

      Paul Graham (English, b. 1956)
      New Orleans 2004 (Woman Eating)
      2004
      From the series a shimmer of possibility
      © Paul Graham

       

      Paul Graham (English, b. 1956) 'New Orleans 2004 (Woman Eating)' from the series 'a shimmer of possibility'

       

      Paul Graham (English, b. 1956)
      New Orleans 2004 (Woman Eating)
      2004
      From the series a shimmer of possibility
      © Paul Graham

       

       

      a shimmer of possibility is the latest project by influential British photographer Paul Graham. This work was created during Graham’s many travels through the United States since 2002. a shimmer of possibility consists of twelve sequences varying in number: from just a few images to more than ten. Each sequence offers an informal look at the life of ordinary, individual Americans – from a woman eating to a man waiting for the bus. The sequences focus attention on very ordinary things, which Graham has photographed with affection and curiosity.

      Each sequence is a short, casual encounter, where we consider for a moment something that attracts our attention. Then life goes on, full of new possibilities. The way Graham presents the diverse sequences in the exhibition is crucial. Instead of being shown in a linear fashion, a sequence fans out over the wall like a cloud. Due to the carefully considered and inventive structure, no viewing direction or predominant hierarchy is imposed on the individual images. The eye of the viewer wanders over the photos, offering the opportunity to make personal connections in an associative manner.

      a shimmer of possibility can be seen as the ultimate antithesis of what Henri Cartier-Bresson called ‘the decisive moment’. This French master endeavoured to record exactly those moments where subject matter and formal aspects combined perfectly in a single image. Paul Graham, by contrast, defends how we normally look around us. We move through the world and look from left to right, see something that grabs our attention, move towards it, glance to the side while en route, pass that by and continue on our way. Observation is a never-ending series of ‘non-decisive moments’, full of potential for anyone who is open to see it.”

      Text from the Foam website [Online] Cited 06/06/2010 no longer available online

       

      Paul Graham (English, b. 1956) 'California 2006 (Sunny Cup)' from the series 'a shimmer of possibility'

       

      Paul Graham (English, b. 1956)
      California 2006 (Sunny Cup)
      2006
      From the series a shimmer of possibility
      © Paul Graham

       

      Paul Graham (English, b. 1956) 'New Orleans 2005 (Cajun Corner)' from the series 'a shimmer of possibility' from the exhibition Exhibition: 'Paul Graham - a shimmer of possibility' at Foam Fotografiemuseum, Amsterdam, April - June 2010

       

      Paul Graham (English, b. 1956)
      New Orleans 2005 (Cajun Corner)
      2005
      From the series a shimmer of possibility
      © Paul Graham

       

      Graham walked the streets of residential neighbourhoods in Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Louisiana, and the sidewalks of New Orleans, Las Vegas, and New York, and when he encountered someone who caught his eye, he photographed them: an older woman retrieving her mail; a young man and woman playing basketball at dusk; a couple returning from the supermarket. Graham followed people navigating their way through crowded city sidewalks, and tracked and photographed lone figures crossing a busy roadway, unaware of the camera.

      Reviewing several trips’ worth of photographs on the large, flat screen of his computer, Graham realised that the more or less randomly gathered pictures could be united into multipart works. As in a poem, where language and rhythm organise words, lines, and stanzas into an imaginative interpretation of a subject, Graham’s imposed yet open-ended structures imply – through close-ups, crosscutting, and juxtapositions of people and nature-specific narratives and overarching ideas. Images of people placed in tandem with other people and with nature suggest the flow of life, pointing to the unknown and the possibility of change, with nature acting as a balm, whether as raindrops, trees silhouetted against a burning sunset, or the bright green grass on a highway meridian.

      In his reconstruction of the world in pictures, Graham describes an America at odds with itself, filled with contradictions and inconsistencies. Yet, through the gloom, the small felicities of life peek through. Fluid, filled with desire, and marked by extremes, his view is what the late curator, critic, and photographer John Szarkowski called, in another context, a “just metaphor” for our times.

      Text from the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) website [Online] Cited 14/08/2019

       

      Paul Graham (English, b. 1956) 'Pittsburgh 2004 (Lawnmower Man)' from the series 'a shimmer of possibility'

       

      Paul Graham (English, b. 1956)
      Pittsburgh 2004 (Lawnmower Man)
      2004
      From the series a shimmer of possibility
      © Paul Graham

       

      Inspired by Chekhov’s short stories – and by his own contagious joy in the book form – photographer Paul Graham has created A Shimmer of Possibility, comprised of 12 individual books, each a photographic short story of everyday life. Some are simple and linear – a man smokes a cigarette while he waits for a bus in Las Vegas, or the camera tracks an autumn walk in Boston. Some entwine two, three or four scenes – while a couple carry their shopping home in Texas, a small child dances with a plastic bag in a garden. Some watch a quiet narrative break unexpectedly into a sublime moment – as a man cuts the grass in Pittsburgh it begins to rain, until the low sun breaks through and illuminates each drop. Graham’s filmic haikus shun any forceful summation or tidy packaging. Instead, they create the impression of life flowing around and past us while we stand and stare, and make it hard not to share the artist’s quiet astonishment with its beauty and grace. The 12 books gathered here are identical in trim size, but vary in length from just a single photograph to 60 pages of images made at one street corner.

      Text from the Mack website [Online] Cited 14/08/2019

       

      Paul Graham (English, b. 1956) 'Las Vegas (Smoking Man)' 2005 from the series 'a shimmer of possibility', 2003-2006

       

      Paul Graham (English, b. 1956)
      Las Vegas (Smoking Man)
      2005
      From the series a shimmer of possibility, 2003-2006
      Colour coupler print
      © Paul Graham

       

       

      a shimmer of possibility by Paul Graham
      12 volumes
      376 pages, 167 colour plates
      24.2 cm x 31.8 cm
      12 cloth covered hardbacks
      Limited edition of 1,000 sets
      MACK
      ISBN: 9783865214836
      Publication date: October 2007

       

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