Review: ‘Climbing the Walls and Other Actions’ by Clare Rae at the Centre for Contemporary Photography, Fitzroy, Melbourne

Exhibition dates: 7th August – 27th September, 2009

 

Clare Rae (Australian, b. 1981) 'Untitled' from the series 'Climbing the Walls and Other Actions' 2009 from the exhibition 'Climbing the Walls and Other Actions' by Clare Rae at the Centre for Contemporary Photography, Fitzroy, Melbourne, August - Sept, 2009

 

Clare Rae (Australian, b. 1981)
Untitled
2009
From the series Climbing the Walls and Other Actions
Pigment print on Museo Crane Silver Rag
50 x 50cm

 

 

“To withdraw into one’s corner is undoubtedly a meager expression. But despite its meagerness, it has numerous images, some, perhaps, of great antiquity, images that are psychologically primitive. At times, the simpler the image, the vaster the dreams.”


Gaston Bachelard.1

 

 

Usually I am not a great fan of ‘faceless’ photography as I call it but this series of work, Climbing the Walls and Other Actions (2009) by the artist Clare Rae is even better than the series by Tracey Moffatt in the previous review.

Exploring activities of the female body in closed domestic spaces these psychologically intense photographs push the physical boundaries of play through the navigation of space. As a child has little awareness about the inherent dangers of a seemingly benign environment so Rae’s self-portraits turn the lens on her conceptualisation of the inner child at play and the activating of the body in and through space. As the artist herself says, “the way children negotiate their surroundings and respond with an unharnessed spatial awareness, which I find really interesting when applied to the adult body.”2

Continuing the themes from the last review, that of spaces of intimacy and reverberation, these photographs offer us fragmentary dialectics that subvert the unity of the archetype, the unity of the body in space. Here the (in)action of the photographic freeze balances the tenuous positions of the body: a re-balancing of both interior and exterior space.

As Noel Arnaud writes, “Je suis l’espace ou je suis” (I am the space where I am). Further, Bachelard notes “… by changing space, by leaving the space of one’s usual sensibilities, one enters into communication with a space that is psychically innovating.”3

In these photographs action is opposed with stillness, danger opposed with suspension; the boundaries of space, both of the body and the environment, the interior and the exterior, memory and dream, are changed.

Space seems to open up and grow with these actions to become poetic space – and the simplicity of the images aids and abets the vastness of our dreams. This change of concrete space does not change our place, but our nature. Here the mapping of self in space, our existence, our exist-stance (to have being in a specified place whether material or spiritual), is challenged in the most beautiful way by these walls and actions, by these creatures, ambiguities, photographs.

Henri Lefebvre insightfully observes, “… each living body is space and has space: it produces itself in space and it also produces that space.”4

I am the (sublime) space where I am, that surrounds me with countless presences.

Dr Marcus Bunyan

 

1/ Bachelard, Gaston. The Poetics of Space. Boston: Beacon Press, 1969, p. 137

2/ Email from the artist 7th September, 2009

3/ Bachelard, Gaston. The Poetics of Space. Boston: Beacon Press, 1969, p. 206

4/ Lefebvre, Henri. The Production of Space. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1974, p. 170


    All images by Clare Rae from the series Climbing the Walls and Other Actions 2009. Many thankx to Clare for allowing me to publish them.

     

     

    Clare Rae (Australian, b. 1981) 'Untitled' from the series 'Climbing the Walls and Other Actions' 2009 from the exhibition 'Climbing the Walls and Other Actions' by Clare Rae at the Centre for Contemporary Photography, Fitzroy, Melbourne, August - Sept, 2009

     

    Clare Rae (Australian, b. 1981)
    Untitled
    2009
    From the series Climbing the Walls and Other Actions
    Pigment print on Museo Crane Silver Rag
    50 x 50cm

     

    Clare Rae (Australian, b. 1981) 'Untitled' from the series 'Climbing the Walls and Other Actions' 2009 from the exhibition 'Climbing the Walls and Other Actions' by Clare Rae at the Centre for Contemporary Photography, Fitzroy, Melbourne, August - Sept, 2009

     

    Clare Rae (Australian, b. 1981)
    Untitled
    2009
    From the series Climbing the Walls and Other Actions
    Pigment print on Museo Crane Silver Rag
    50 x 50cm

     

    Clare Rae (Australian, b. 1981) 'Untitled' from the series 'Climbing the Walls and Other Actions' 2009

     

    Clare Rae (Australian, b. 1981)
    Untitled
    2009
    From the series Climbing the Walls and Other Actions
    Pigment print on Museo Crane Silver Rag
    50 x 50cm

     

     

    Climbing the Walls and Other Actions is primarily concerned with visually representing my experience of femininity, whilst also exploring aspects of representation that relate to feminism. The project considers the relationship between the body and space by including formal elements within each frame such as windows and corners. Through a sequence of precarious poses I explore my relationship with femininity, an approach born of frustration. I use the body to promote ideas of discomfort and awkwardness, resisting the passivity inherent in traditional representations of femininity. The images attempt to de-stabilise the figure, drawing tension from the potential dangers the body faces in these positions. Whilst the actions taking place are not in themselves particularly dangerous, the work demonstrates a gentle testing of physical boundaries and limitations via a child-like exploration of the physical environment.

    Text from the Centre for Contemporary Photography website [Online] Cited 15/09/2009. No longer available online

     

    Clare Rae (Australian, b. 1981) 'Untitled' from the series 'Climbing the Walls and Other Actions' 2009

     

    Clare Rae (Australian, b. 1981)
    Untitled
    2009
    From the series Climbing the Walls and Other Actions
    Pigment print on Museo Crane Silver Rag
    50 x 50cm

     

    Clare Rae (Australian, b. 1981) 'Untitled' from the series 'Climbing the Walls and Other Actions' 2009

     

    Clare Rae (Australian, b. 1981)
    Untitled
    2009
    From the series Climbing the Walls and Other Actions
    Pigment print on Museo Crane Silver Rag
    50 x 50cm

     

     

    Centre for Contemporary Photography
    Level 2, Perry St Building
    Collingwood Yards, Collingwood
    Victoria 3066

    Opening hours:
    Wednesday – Saturday 11am – 5pm

    Clare Rae website

    Centre for Contemporary Photography website

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    Review: ‘First Jobs’ by Tracey Moffatt at Centre for Contemporary Photography, Fitzroy, Melbourne

    Exhibition dates: 7th August – 27th September, 2009

     

    Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960) 'First Jobs, Fruit Market' 1975 from the exhibition 'First Jobs' by Tracey Moffatt at Centre for Contemporary Photography, Fitzroy, Melbourne, August - Sept, 2009

     

    Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960)
    First Jobs, Fruit Market
    1975
    Archival pigments on rice paper with gel medium
    71 × 91.5cm

     

     

    There are some wonderful bodies of photographic work on show around Melbourne at the moment and this is one of them.

    Featuring twelve archival pigment on rice paper with gel medium prints, Tracey Moffatt’s series First Jobs (2008) is a knockout. Images of the artist are inserted into found photographs which are then “hand coloured” (like old postcards) in Photoshop. Moffatt’s series conceptualises the early jobs that she had to do to survive – investigating the banality of the jobs, the value of friendships that were formed coupled with an implicit understanding of the dictum ‘work is life’.

    Moffatt’s images hark back to the White Australia policy of the 1950s and the home and living books of that period. With their hyper-real colours, strange coloured skies, green washing machines and purple tarmac Moffatt amps up the voltage of these images and subverts their idealisation. Here is the re-presentation of the physical and spatial isolation of the figure (store clerk / housekeeper) or the sublimation of the usually female figure into the amorphous mass of the whole (meat packing / pineapple cannery) in quintessentially Australian environments. Here also is comment on the nature of a patriarchal society – the smiling receptionist sitting under the portrait of her male boss, awaiting his command.

    The spaces of these photographs seem to (literally) consume the artist and her remembrance of these jobs. Despite her smiling face in each of the images we implicitly understand the banality of the jobs for we have done them ourselves. We know these spaces intimately: the spaces inhabit us as much as we inhabit them. As the viewer we experience the being of these images, their reverberation, where the two kinds of space – the space of intimacy and the world space – blend.1

    The only sour note of the series comes not in the work itself but in the accompanying artist statement (see below). In this churlish expose of the ‘woe is me, I’m a full time artist and isn’t it so difficult to be a full time artist’ variety, Moffatt complains about the miserable voices in her head and about having to get up off the couch because she is the only person able to make the work and the money. Oh to be so lucky to actually make a living as a full time artist and have the time and space to be creative 7 days a week! Would I have her situation anytime soon? Ha, um, yes.

    Dr Marcus Bunyan

     

    1/ Bachelard, Gaston. The Poetics of Space. Boston: Beacon Press, 1969, p. 203.


      Many thankx to the Centre for Contemporary Photography for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting.

       

       

      Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960) 'First Jobs, Housekeeper' 1975 from the exhibition 'First Jobs' by Tracey Moffatt at Centre for Contemporary Photography, Fitzroy, Melbourne, August - Sept, 2009

       

      Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960)
      First Jobs, Housekeeper
      1975
      Archival pigments on rice paper with gel medium
      71 × 91.5cm

       

      Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960) 'First Jobs, Store Clerk' 1975 from the exhibition 'First Jobs' by Tracey Moffatt at Centre for Contemporary Photography, Fitzroy, Melbourne, August - Sept, 2009

       

      Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960)
      First Jobs, Store Clerk
      1975
      Archival pigments on rice paper with gel medium
      71 × 91.5cm

       

      Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960) 'First Jobs, Corner Store' 1977

       

      Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960)
      First Jobs, Corner Store
      1977
      Archival pigments on rice paper with gel medium
      71 × 91.5cm

       

      Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960) 'First Jobs, Receptionist' 1977

       

      Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960)
      First Jobs, Receptionist
      1977
      Archival pigments on rice paper with gel medium
      71 × 91.5cm

       

      Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960) 'First Jobs, Meat Packing' 1978

       

      Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960)
      First Jobs, Meat Packing
      1978
      Archival pigments on rice paper with gel medium
      71 × 91.5cm

       

       

      Over the years my friends and I joke about our dreadful past jobs. Jobs we worked as teenagers and young students. Awful jobs that we would rather forget about such as cleaning out the local cinema after a screening of The Exorcist in 1974.

      When I was a kid I always had jobs and I always made my own money whether it was receiving a dollar for pulling up the weeds in the yard or baby sitting for neighbours or working at the local green grocers. The thing about making a bit of your own cash was that you could buy your own clothes and not have to wear the clothes that your mother picked out.

      In 1978 at seventeen I worked in factories peeling pineapples. I also packed meat and shelled prawns. Such back breaking labour was exhausting but the money was good.  After one year I saved enough money to travel to Europe and backpacked around for nine months. Then in 1980 I went to art school in Brisbane but continued part-time work as a waitress to pay for art materials.

      After art school I was desperate for money to pay the rent and I worked many jobs. Some were: scrubbing floors in a women’s refuge, washing dishes in a canteen and parking cars in a car park beneath a restaurant called Dirty Dicks (I had no driver’s licence, but the patrons were always drunk and didn’t care.)

      I am resentful and appalled at the work I had to do to survive. I hold a grudge towards rich kids who never had to slave like I did. Secretly though I’m proud of myself. When I think of those early years I realise that I was learning to be tough and work whether I liked it or not. I put my head down and was forced to be productive. I was learning how to get on with other people and learning to handle a boss. These days I do nothing but make art and have exhibitions. Being an artist feels like being on a permanent but jittery holiday in comparison to those early working days. Now I sleep in until 9.30am and press the ‘ignore’ button on my phone if I don’t feel like talking to anyone. But, as Bette Davis put it, it is ‘The Lonely Life’. You have come up with the ideas and make them happen. No-one else is going to do it for you.

      But I remember the good things about the factory floor. Walking into work everyday and saying hi to people you knew, there was a camaraderie. The work was mindless but it didn’t mean that your mind couldn’t go places. Then there was knock-off time. The bell would ring and you would be out the door with a wad of cash in your hand and not a care in the world.

      In being a full-time artist there never is any knock-off time. There’s always a nagging, miserable voice of ideas in your head and you MUST get up off the sofa and produce work. The bell never rings and you never know where your next buck is coming from. Your mind is constantly wound up. You’re never really physically tired not like when you had a real honest job. But would I go back to working in a factory just to get good a night’s sleep? Ha, um, no.”

      Tracey Moffatt, 
New York 2008

      Press release from Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery [Online] Cited 23/04/2019

       

      Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960) 'First Jobs, Pineapple Cannery' 1978

       

      Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960)
      First Jobs, Pineapple Cannery
      1978
      Archival pigments on rice paper with gel medium
      71 × 91.5 cm

       

      Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960) 'First Jobs, Parking Cars' 1981

       

      Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960)
      First Jobs, Parking Cars
      1981
      Archival pigments on rice paper with gel medium
      71 × 91.5cm

       

      Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960) 'First Jobs, Canteen' 1984

       

      Tracey Moffat (Australian, b. 1960)
      First Jobs, Canteen
      1984
      Archival pigments on rice paper with gel medium
      71 × 91.5cm

       

       

      Centre for Contemporary Photography
      Level 2, Perry St Building
      Collingwood Yards, Collingwood
      Victoria 3066

      Opening hours:
      Wednesday – Saturday 11am – 5pm

      Centre for Contemporary Photography website

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      Exhibition: ‘Don McCullin – In England’ at the National Media Museum, Bradford

      Exhibition dates: 8th May – 27th September, 2009

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935) 'Ladies' Day, Royal Ascot' 2006 from the exhibition 'Don McCullin – In England' at the National Media Museum, Bradford, May - Sept, 2009

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935)
      Ladies’ Day, Royal Ascot
      2006
      Gelatin silver print
      © Don McCullin

       

       

      A passionate and personal view of England by one of our greatest living photographers, In England reflected on England from the 1950s to the present day. For half a decade McCullin recorded images of England, highlighting issues surrounding wealth, race, class and social justice. This was the first ever exhibition dedicated exclusively to this aspect of his work.

      The images, taken mainly from two books – Homecoming (1979) and In England (2007) – are often imbued with their social or political context. Several exhibited photographs were taken during McCullin’s trips to Bradford and around his own home city, London, as well as Liverpool and the North East. The exhibition also included McCullin’s first ever published photograph, The Guv’nors.

      Dr Marcus Bunyan


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

       

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935) 'Early morning, Steel Foundry, West Hartlepool, County Durham, U.K.' 1963 from the exhibition 'Don McCullin – In England' at the National Media Museum, Bradford, May - Sept, 2009

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935)
      Early morning, Steel Foundry, West Hartlepool, County Durham, U.K.
      1963
      Gelatin silver print
      © Don McCullin

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935) 'Kids on Bradford estate' c. 1970s from the exhibition 'Don McCullin – In England' at the National Media Museum, Bradford, May - Sept, 2009

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935)
      Kids on Bradford estate
      c. 1970s
      Gelatin silver print
      © Don McCullin

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935) 'Bradford, early 1970s' c. 1970s

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935)
      Bradford, early 1970s
      c. 1970s
      Gelatin silver print
      © Don McCullin

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935) 'Blackpool, early 1970s' c. 1970s

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935)
      Blackpool, early 1970s
      c. 1970s
      Gelatin silver print
      © Don McCullin

       

       

      A passionate and personal view of Britain by one of our greatest living photographers is being showcased in a major free-to-enter exhibition at the National Media Museum from 8 May – 27 September 2009.

      Don McCullin – In England reflects on Britain from the 1950s to the present day. For half a decade McCullin, in addition to travelling the world photographing war ravaged countries to great acclaim, has been recording England and highlighting issues surrounding wealth, race, class and social justice.

      The National Media Museum is hosting the first ever exhibition dedicated exclusively to this aspect of his work. Curator Colin Harding said: “Although Don is probably best known for his war photography, he is not purely a war photographer and does not class himself as such. However, many of the 70 black and white images displayed in this new show are clearly influenced by his experiences abroad. Don’s vision of England is not a pretty one. He photographed what he saw and what he saw was often harsh – poverty, unemployment, discrimination, but he always photographs with passion and empathy.”

      Many of the images have a political or social context and are taken extensively from two books – Homecoming (1979) and In England (2007); coincidentally published in the same years Margaret Thatcher came to power and Tony Blair left power respectively. Some of the images will be publicly displayed for the first time.

      Don McCullin – In England gives audiences the chance to see his first ever published photograph – of The Guv’nors, a 1950s gang from his neighbourhood around Finsbury Park, London. The picture appeared in The Observer newspaper after a policeman was murdered by one of the gang members.

      Several exhibited photographs were taken during McCullin’s trips to Bradford (the National Media Museum’s home city) and around his own home city, London, as well as Liverpool and the North East. Other aspects of English life are featured – a series of landscapes, including a study of Hadrian’s Wall taken earlier this year, a 1968 shoot with The Beatles, and trips to the seaside and Royal Ascot.

      To complement the exhibition a new area will be produced on the Museum’s website offering exclusive video interviews, images, further information, and links to other relevant websites.

      Text from the National Media Museum website Nd [Online] Cited 12/09/2009 no longer available online

      National Media Museum Don McCullin exhibition archive web page.

       

       

      Photographer Don McCullin on his early years
      In 2009 Don McCullin spoke to us about his early years as part of his In England exhibition at the museum.

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935) 'Windsor Baths, Bradford, early 1970s' c. 1970s

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935)
      Windsor Baths, Bradford, early 1970s
      c. 1970s
      Gelatin silver print
      © Don McCullin

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935) 'Mayfair, London' 1965

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935)
      Mayfair, London
      1965
      Gelatin silver print
      © Don McCullin

       

      Don McCullin. 'Towards an Iron Age hill fort, Somerset' 1991

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935)
      Towards an Iron Age hill fort, Somerset
      1991
      Gelatin silver print
      © Don McCullin

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935) 'The Guv'nors, Finsbury Park, London' 1958

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935)
      The Guv’nors, Finsbury Park, London
      1958
      Gelatin silver print
      © Don McCullin

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935) 'Snowy, Cambridge, early 1970s' c. 1970s

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935)
      Snowy, Cambridge, early 1970s
      c. 1970s
      Gelatin silver print
      © Don McCullin

       

      According to McCullin, a postcard of this photograph sold ‘like hotcakes’ in Australia. McCullin found Snowy, the man in the portrait, standing by the side of the road with an ice-cream barrow in Cambridge, in the early 1970s. He pulled the mouse out of his pocket and put it into his mouth as McCullin took pictures.

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935) 'Mother and son, Bradford' 1978

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935)
      Mother and son, Bradford
      1978
      Gelatin silver print
      © Don McCullin

       

       

      Don McCullin (British, b. 1935)
      Festival of Speed, Goodwood, Sussex
      2006
      Gelatin silver print
      © Don McCullin

       

       

      National Media Museum
      Bradford, West Yorkshire, BD1 1NQ

      Opening hours:
      Wednesday – Sunday
 10am – 5pm

      National Media Museum website

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      Exhibition: ‘Ball Parks: Jim Dow’s Photographs of Baseball Stadiums’ at The National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

      Exhibition dates: 4th July – 27th September, 2009

       

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942) 'Exhibition Stadium' 1982 from the exhibition 'Ball Parks: Jim Dow's Photographs of Baseball Stadiums' at The National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, July - Sept, 2009

       

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942)
      Exhibition Stadium
      1982
      National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa
      Gift of Benjamin Greenberg, Ottawa, 1988 and 1989

       

       

      These feel like religious reliquaries, a triptych form which arises from early Christian art but here a paean to the monumentalisation of sport, architecture, human heroics and grandiosity.

      Apologies that the blog is not wide enough to display these panoramic images at a decent size but you can click on the photographs to see a larger version of the image. I have also displayed each 8″ x 10″ negative sequentially.

      Dr Marcus Bunyan


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

       

       

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942) 'Exhibition Stadium' 1982 (detail)

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942) 'Exhibition Stadium' 1982

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942) 'Exhibition Stadium' 1982

       

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942)
      Exhibition Stadium (individual frames)
      1982
      National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa
      Gift of Benjamin Greenberg, Ottawa, 1988 and 1989

       

       

      This installation from the National Gallery’s Collection of Photographs comprises 26 colour panoramic views of empty baseball stadiums across North America, from Exhibition Stadium, the home of the Toronto Blue Jays, and Montréal’s Olympic Stadium to the Houston Astro’s Astrodome. Taken in 1982, Jim Dow, a respected American photographer as well as a sports enthusiast, imparts through these images both a passion for the monumentality of the architecture and its abstract geometry and his love of baseball. The emptiness of the stadiums simultaneously evokes memory and a sense of anticipation.

      Jim Dow’s interest in those places where people enact their everyday rituals, from the barbershop to the baseball park, has guided the path of his photographic career. Dow is concerned with capturing “human ingenuity and spirit” in endangered regional traditions – a barbershop with a heavy patina of town life covering the walls, the opulent time capsule of an old private New York club, the densely packed display of smoking pipes in an English tobacconist shop – all artefacts of a vanishing era.

      Dow earned a B.F.A. and a M.F.A. in graphic design and photography from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1965 and 1968 respectively. An early influence was Walker Evans’s seminal book American Photographs (1938). Dow recalls the appeal of Evans’s “razor sharp, infinitely detailed, small images of town architecture and people. What stood out was a palpable feeling of loss … pictures that seemingly read like paragraphs, even chapters in one long, complex, rich narrative.” Soon after graduate school Dow had the opportunity to work with Evans. He was hired to print his mentor’s photographs for a 1972 Museum of Modern Art retrospective.

      Dow has taught photography at Harvard, Tufts University and the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and his work has been widely exhibited. Among his series is Corner Shops of Britain (1995), which features facades of small family-run businesses: vitrine-like shop windows showcase goods from candy jars to jellied eels. Another series, Time Passing (1984-2004), captures North Dakota “folk art” such as rural road signage, hand-painted billboards, and ornate gravestones.

      Dow first gained attention for his panoramic triptychs of baseball stadiums, a project that began with an image he made of Veteran’s Stadium in Philadelphia in 1980. Using an 8 x 10″ camera, he has documented more than two hundred major and minor league parks in the United States and Canada.”

      Text from Artdaily.org website [Online] Cited 17/04/2019

       

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942) 'The Kingdome. Seattle Mariners' 1982 from the exhibition 'Ball Parks: Jim Dow's Photographs of Baseball Stadiums' at The National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, July - Sept, 2009

       

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942)
      The Kingdome. Seattle Mariners
      1982
      National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa
      Gift of Benjamin Greenberg, Ottawa, 1988 and 1989

       

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942) 'The Kingdome. Seattle Mariners' 1982 (detail)

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942) 'The Kingdome. Seattle Mariners' 1982

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942) 'The Kingdome. Seattle Mariners' 1982 (detail)

       

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942)
      The Kingdome. Seattle Mariners (individual frames)
      1982
      National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa
      Gift of Benjamin Greenberg, Ottawa, 1988 and 1989

       

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942) 'Olympic Stadium, Montreal' 1982

       

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942)
      Olympic Stadium, Montreal
      1982
      National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa
      Gift of Benjamin Greenberg, Ottawa, 1988 and 1989

       

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942) 'Olympic Stadium, Montreal' 1982 (detail)

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942) 'Olympic Stadium, Montreal' 1982 (detail)

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942) 'Olympic Stadium, Montreal' 1982 (detail)

       

      Jim Dow (American, b. 1942)
      Olympic Stadium, Montreal (individual frames)
      1982
      National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa
      Gift of Benjamin Greenberg, Ottawa, 1988 and 1989

       

       

      National Gallery of Canada
      380 Sussex Drive
      P.O. Box 427, Station A
      Ottawa, Ontario
      Canada 
K1N 9N4

      Opening hours:
      Daily 9.30am – 5pm

      National Gallery of Canada website

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      Exhibition: ‘In Focus: Making A Scene’ at The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles

      Exhibition dates: 30th June – 18th October, 2009

       

      Hill & Adamson (Scottish, active 1843-1848) '[Lane and Peddie as Afghans]' 1843 from the exhibition 'In Focus: Making A Scene' at The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, June - Oct, 2009

       

      Hill & Adamson (Scottish, active 1843-1848)
      [Lane and Peddie as Afghans]
      1843
      Salted paper print from a paper negative
      20.6 × 14.3cm (8 1/8 × 5 5/8 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum

       

      The team of Hill and Adamson initially began making dramatic portrait photographs as studies for one of Hill’s composite paintings. They also produced costume studies, including this scene in which Arabic scholar Mr. Lane and Mr. (Peddie) Redding appear in foreign garb.

       

       

      What a fabulous selection of photographs to illustrate a fascinating “scene”. I love staged, theatrical, constructed, conceptual, collaged, surreal, imaginary, narrative photography.

      Dr Marcus Bunyan


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

       

       

      Unknown maker, French. 'Woman Reading to a Girl' c. 1845 from the exhibition 'In Focus: Making A Scene' at The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, June - Oct, 2009

       

      Unknown maker, French
      Woman Reading to a Girl
      c. 1845
      Daguerreotype
      9.1 × 7.1cm (3 9/16 × 2 13/16 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum

       

      Through a skilful manipulation, the light coming from above and behind the figures casts the faces of mother and child in a softly modulated half-shadow. Their close grouping and familiar, intimate gestures evoke tenderness. The reflected light on the woman’s pointing finger and on the glowing white pages of the open book forms a strong visual triangle, drawing the viewer’s eye and serving to integrate and balance the composition.

       

      Oscar Gustave Rejlander (British, born Sweden, 1813-1875) 'The Infant Photography Giving the Painter an Additional Brush' c. 1856 from the exhibition 'In Focus: Making A Scene' at The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, June - Oct, 2009

       

      Oscar Gustave Rejlander (British born Sweden, 1813-1875)
      The Infant Photography Giving the Painter an Additional Brush
      c. 1856
      Albumen silver print
      6 × 7.1cm (2 3/8 × 2 13/16 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum

       

      Oscar Rejlander’s photograph could be read as a metaphor of his own career. The additional “brush” or image-making tool provided by photography to painters was evident from the beginnings of the medium. Many early practitioners arrived at photography from painting, as did Rejlander. Photographs were often thought of and used as sketching tools for painters. Although photographs never managed to signal the death of painting as initially predicted, they did frequently assume the function that drawing had traditionally held in relation to painting.

      Compositionally, this is an unusual photograph. Rejlander employs a narrative device from painting: the use of figures, or parts of figures, as allegorical representations for ideas. A very young child represents the infant medium of photography. The Painter appears only as a hand extending into the frame at the upper left, although the traditional arts are also represented by the sculpture reproduction in the lower left corner. The Infant Photography, identified by the camera on which the child supports himself, faces away from the camera, his features totally obscured. The mirror behind the child gives a clear reflection of Rejlander at his camera, making this image.

       

      Roger Fenton (English, 1819-1869) 'Contemplative Odalisque' 1858

       

      Roger Fenton (English, 1819-1869)
      Contemplative Odalisque
      1858
      Albumen silver print
      35.9 × 43.8cm (14 1/8 × 17 1/4 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum
      Gift of Professors Joseph and Elaine Monsen

       

      Three years after traveling in the Crimea, Roger Fenton made a series of Orientalist photographs in his London studio using props gathered during his travels and non-Eastern models. Orientalism refers to just such romanticised depictions of imagined scenes of Muslim culture in the Ottoman Empire and its territories in the Near East and North Africa.

      Orientalist scenes were more often fiction than fact. Cultural biases and misunderstandings were laid down on paper or canvas and frequently became the only source of information on the subjects depicted. When a group of these Orientalist photographs was exhibited in 1858, one reviewer described them as “truly representing some phases in the life of this interesting people.”

      But not everyone so easily accepted Fenton’s images at face value; a more astute critic called for “the necessity of having real national types as models.” The same model shown here also appears as “Nubian” and “Egyptian” in other photographs by Fenton. This photograph may have originally been exhibited with the title The Reverie. The odalisque, meaning a slave or concubine in a harem, poses upon her sofa. Barefoot, blouse open, her surroundings convey a sensual disarray that conforms to an Orientalising fantasy of the available woman.

       

      Julia Margaret Cameron (British, born India, 1815-1879) 'The Rosebud Garden of Girls' June 1868

       

      Julia Margaret Cameron (British, born India, 1815-1879)
      The Rosebud Garden of Girls
      June 1868
      Album silver print
      29.4 × 26.7cm (11 9/16 × 10 1/2 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum

       

      As evolutionary science and increasing secularism transformed the way Victorians understood the world, Cameron remained a devout Christian. She photographed influential public figures of her day as well as the women of her household, casting them in allegories of literary and religious subjects. Like her artistic contemporaries, the Pre-Raphaelite painters, who modelled their work on medieval religious and mythological art, Cameron intended her photographs to evince a connection between the spiritual and the natural realms.

       

      Julia Margaret Cameron (British, born India, 1815-1879) 'Venus Chiding Cupid and Removing His Wings' 1872

       

      Julia Margaret Cameron (British, born India, 1815-1879)
      Venus Chiding Cupid and Removing His Wings
      1872
      Album silver print
      32.4 × 27.3cm (12 3/4 × 10 3/4 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum

       

      Lewis Carroll (British, 1832-1898) 'Saint George and the Dragon' June 26, 1875

       

      Lewis Carroll (British, 1832-1898)
      Saint George and the Dragon
      June 26, 1875
      Albumen silver print
      12.2 × 16.2cm (4 13/16 × 6 3/8 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum

       

      Like Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and his other books, Carroll’s photographs are fantasies starring the children of his friends. In this production, the Kitchin siblings enacted the romantic legend of Saint George, the patron saint of England, who slayed a child-eating dragon before it devoured a princess. George later married the rescued princess and converted her pagan town to Christianity. Using crude stagecraft to reference key plot points, Carroll condensed the entire legend into a single scene in which the princess appears as both damsel in distress and bride.

       

      Baron Wilhelm von Gloeden (German, 1856-1931) 'Untitled [Two Male Youths Holding Palm Fronds]' c. 1885 - 1905

       

      Baron Wilhelm von Gloeden (German, 1856-1931)
      Untitled [Two Male Youths Holding Palm Fronds]
      c. 1885-1905
      Albumen silver print
      23.3 × 17.5cm (9 3/16 × 6 7/8 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum

       

      Baron Wilhelm von Gloeden (German, 1856-1931) 'L'Offerta' (The Offering) 1902

       

      Baron Wilhelm von Gloeden (German, 1856-1931)
      L’Offerta (The Offering)
      1902
      Albumen silver print
      22.4 × 16.8cm (8 13/16 × 6 5/8 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum

       

      Von Gloeden left Germany and settled in a coastal town in Sicily, where he took up photography. His subjects were young native boys, whom he often photographed nude in classical compositions. Rather than reenact specific historical or literary scenes, von Gloeden mused nostalgically on the ancient Greek and Roman ancestry of his attractive models.

       

      Guido Rey (Italian, 1861-1935) '[The Letter]' 1908

       

      Guido Rey (Italian, 1861-1935)
      [The Letter]
      1908
      Platinum print
      21.9 × 17cm (8 5/8 × 6 11/16 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum

       

      A deliberate homage to an earlier artistic style that Guido Rey admired, the composition derives from a painting made by Dutch artist Jan Vermeer in the 1600s. In this posed scene, a young suitor bearing flowers approaches a woman seated at her writing desk, with her pen poised in mid-air as she turns to greet him. A leaded glass window opens into her room, providing a natural light source for the photograph’s illumination. The mounted corner clock, decorative jar on the desk, and painting on the wall were Rey’s everyday household items or objects borrowed from friends, carefully chosen for period accuracy. Likewise, a seamstress who lived in the attic of Rey’s home in Turin created the costumes to his specifications.

       

       

      Photography, although commonly associated with truthfulness, has been used to produce fiction since its introduction in 1839. The acceptance of staging, and the degree of its application, has varied greatly depending on the genre and the historical moment, but it has persisted as an artistic approach. The photographs in this exhibition, drawn exclusively from the J. Paul Getty Museum’s collection, make no pretence about presenting the world as it exists; instead, they are the productions of directors and actors who rely on stagecraft and occasional darkroom trickery to tell stories.
 Spanning photography’s history and expressing a range of sentiments, the images in this exhibition are inspired by art history, literature, religion, and mainstream media.

      Like Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and his other books, Lewis Carroll’s photographs are fantasies starring his friends’ children. In the image below, children enact the mythological story of Saint George, the patron saint of England, slaying a child-eating dragon before it could devour a princess.

      Life Imitating Art

      Well-represented in this exhibition are tableaux vivants (living pictures), inspired by the popular Victorian parlour game in which costumed participants posed to resemble famous works of art or literary scenes.
The genre paintings of 17th-century Dutch masters Johannes Vermeer and Pieter de Hooch fascinated Guido Rey. Not self-conscious about being slavish to the past, he carefully studied the paintings and then arranged similar tableaux for his camera. His photographs captured equally serene domestic scenes and mimicked the minute architectural details of 17th-century interiors, such as the leaded-glass windowpanes and the checkerboard floor.

      Playing Dress Up

      The exhibition also includes costume studies of people posing as literary characters and self-portraits of artists pretending to be other people. 

American painter and photographer Man Ray and the French artist Marcel Duchamp met in New York in 1915, and they began a playful, iconoclastic collaboration that resulted in the photograph (above), among others. Influenced by Dadaism, a cultural movement that rejected reason and logic in favour of anarchy and the absurd, their work embraced games of chance, performance, and wordplay. Here an irreverent Duchamp appears in women’s clothing as his alter ego, Rrose Sélavy, a pun on the French pronunciation “Eros, c’est la vie” (Sex, that’s life).

      Imaginary Subjects

      A number of photographs in the exhibition explore the medium’s capacity to visualise subjects of the imagination by using darkroom trickery to manipulate prints.
 An optician and family man, Ralph Eugene Meatyard photographed his children, friends, and neighbours enacting dramas in suburban backyards and abandoned buildings near his Lexington, Kentucky, home. He often used experimental techniques, such as multiple exposures and blurred motion. Uncanny details imbue Meatyard’s otherwise ordinary vernacular scenes with the qualities of a dream or supernatural vision.

      Theatricality as a Critical Strategy

      In recent decades there has been renewed interest in theatricality among contemporary photographers whose highly artificial scenes critique mainstream media and representation.
 In her series Family Docudrama Eileen Cowin blurs the boundaries between truth and fiction, and private behaviour and public performance. Drawing equally from family snapshots and soap operas, Cowin presents staged domestic scenes in which she and members of her family, including her identical twin sister, perform as actors. In these ambiguous, open-ended narratives, dramatic moments are exaggerated, and the camera’s glare is ever present.”

      Text from The J. Paul Getty Museum website [Online] Cited 16/04/2019

       

      Man Ray (American, 1890-1976) 'Rrose Sélavy (Marcel Duchamp)' 1923

       

      Man Ray (American, 1890-1976)
      Rrose Sélavy (Marcel Duchamp)
      1923
      Gelatin silver print
      22.1 × 17.6cm (8 11/16 × 6 15/16 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum
      © Man Ray Trust ARS-ADAGP

       

      When Man Ray moved to Paris, he was greeted by his friend and artistic compatriot Marcel Duchamp, who introduced him to members of the Dada circle of writers and artists. The two men had collaborated in a number of creative endeavours in New York, including the creation of a female alter-ego for Duchamp named Rrose Sélavy (a pun on the French pronunciation Eros, c’est la vie “Sex, that’s life”). Man Ray photographed Duchamp several times as Rrose Sélavy.

       

      Man Ray (American, 1890-1976) 'Larmes' 1930

       

      Man Ray (American, 1890-1976)
      Larmes (Tears)
      1930-1932
      Gelatin silver print
      22.9 × 29.8cm (9 × 11 3/4 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum
      © Man Ray Trust ARS-ADAGP

       

      Judging from his inclusion of this image in other photographic compositions, Man Ray must have considered Tears one of his most successful photographs. A cropped version of it with a single eye also appears as the first plate in a 1934 book of his photographs.

      Like the emotive expression of a silent screen star in a film still, the woman’s plaintive upward glance and mascara-encrusted lashes seem intended to invoke wonder at the cause of her distress. The face belongs to a fashion model who cries tears of glistening, round glass beads; the effect is to aestheticise the sentiment her tears would normally express. Man Ray made this photograph in Paris around the time of his breakup with his lover Lee Miller, and the woman’s false tears may relate to that event in the artist’s life.

       

      Dora Maar (French, 1907-1997) 'Le Simulateur (The Pretender)' 1936

       

      Dora Maar (French, 1907-1997)
      Le Simulateur (The Pretender)
      1936
      Gelatin silver print
      26.6 × 21.7cm (10 1/2 × 8 1/2 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum
      © Dora Maar Estate/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/ADAGP, Paris

       

      In this picture Dora Maar constructed her own reality by joining together several images and rephotographing them. The seamlessness of the photographic surface makes this construction believable and leaves the viewer wondering about the strange world the figure inhabits. On closer examination, the viewer may notice that the floor is an upside-down ceiling vault, that the bricked-in windows are drawn in by hand, and that the figure was added separately. Despite these discoveries, the picture resists logical interpretation.

       

      Ralph Eugene Meatyard (American, 1925-1972) 'Untitled (Michael and Christopher Meatyard)' 1966

       

      Ralph Eugene Meatyard (American, 1925-1972)
      Untitled (Michael and Christopher Meatyard)
      1966
      Gelatin silver print
      16.8 × 17.5cm (6 5/8 × 6 7/8 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum
      Gift of Christopher Meatyard and Jonathan Greene
      © Estate of Ralph Eugene Meatyard

       

      An optician and family man, Meatyard photographed his children, friends, and neighbours enacting dramas in the suburban backyards and abandoned buildings of Lexington, Kentucky. He often used experimental techniques, such as multiple exposures and blurred motion. Uncanny details imbue Meatyard’s otherwise ordinary vernacular scenes with the qualities of a dream or supernatural vision.

       

      Lucas Samaras (American born Greece, b. 1936) 'Photo-Transformation' November 22, 1973

       

      Lucas Samaras (American born Greece, b. 1936)
      Photo-Transformation
      November 22, 1973
      Polaroid SX-70 dye diffusion print
      7.6 × 7.6cm (3 × 3 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum
      © Lucas Samaras

       

      In this self-portrait, Lucas Samaras reaches out as if trapped in the photograph. In sharp contrast to the indistinct background of his upper body, his crisply defined fingers curl forward, as if he is searching for a way to transcend a two-dimensional world of his own creation. An overriding sense of claustrophobia defines this image, underscored by the small scale of the Polaroid print. Samaras, a hermit-like person, made many Polaroid self-portraits like this in the 1970s as a means of observing himself. The images are open to a wide range of interpretation. Here, Samaras may have tried to convey the sense of isolation he experiences as a reclusive person.

       

      Lucas Samaras (American born Greece, b. 1936) 'Photo-Transformation' September 9, 1976

       

      Lucas Samaras (American born Greece, b. 1936)
      Photo-Transformation
      September 9, 1976
      Polaroid SX-70 dye diffusion print
      7.6 × 7.6cm (3 × 3 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum
      © Lucas Samaras

       

      As if engaging in a tug-of-war with himself, Lucas Samaras confronts and struggles with his own reflection in this self-portrait. The leg-less reflection is incomplete, however, giving the impression of a deformed adversary. A monochromatic polka-dot background and a vibrant green and red border act as a stage for this dramatic struggle.

      Samaras’s Photo-Transformations, which he made in the 1970s as a means to examine various facets of himself, could be understood as visual manifestations of internal conflict. They are complex psychological investigations that, according to at least one critic, illustrate one person’s efforts toward spiritual healing.

       

      Lucas Samaras (American, born Greece, 1936) 'Photo-Transformation, 1976'

       

      Lucas Samaras (American born Greece, b. 1936)
      Photo-Transformation, 1976
      1976
      Polaroid SX-70 dye diffusion print
      7.6 × 7.6cm (3 × 3 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum
      © Lucas Samaras

       

      Submerged in narcissism, nothing remains… but “me and myself, I am my own audience, the other, contemplating my existence.”

      Made in the 1970s as a means of studying himself, Lucas Samaras’s photographs illustrate the internal struggle that can occur between conflicting aspects of one personality. Bent over a captain’s chair, Samaras rests his head as if he is at the guillotine. Another blurry form hovers above, about to violently attack the submissive figure.

      Samaras made his Photo-Transformations, a series of self-portraits, with SX-70 Polaroid film. Still wet, the film’s emulsions could be manipulated to alter the finished image. He used straight pins, rubber erasers, and other simple tools to “draw” into the developing surface. For this portrait, he created a diamond pattern over and around the dominant figure that underscores the frenzy of motion.

       

      Joel Peter-Witkin (American, born 1939) 'Mother and Child (with Retractor, Screaming)' 1979

       

      Joel Peter-Witkin (American, b. 1939)
      Mother and Child (with Retractor, Screaming)
      1979
      Gelatin silver print
      36 × 36cm (14 3/16 × 14 3/16 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum
      © Joel-Peter Witkin

       

      Eileen Cowin (American, born 1947) 'Untitled' from the series 'Family Docudrama' 1980-1983

       

      Eileen Cowin (American, b. 1947)
      Untitled from the series Family Docudrama
      1980-1983
      Chromogenic print
      48.4 × 60.7cm (19 1/16 × 23 7/8 in.)
      The J. Paul Getty Museum
      Purchased with funds provided by the Photographs Council
      © Eileen Cowin

       

      In her series Family Docudrama Cowin blurs the boundaries between truth and fiction, and private behaviour and public performance. Drawing equally from family snapshots and soap operas, she presents staged domestic scenes in which she and members of her family, including her identical twin sister, perform as actors. In these ambiguous, open-ended narratives, dramatic moments are exaggerated and the camera’s glare is ever present.

       

       

      The J. Paul Getty Museum
      1200 Getty Center Drive
      Los Angeles, California 90049

      Opening hours:
      Daily 10am – 5.30pm

      The J. Paul Getty Museum website

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      Exhibition: ‘Vera Lutter’ at Gagosian Gallery, Beverly Hills, California

      Exhibition dates: 24th July – 12th September, 2009

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960) 'Campo Santa Sofia, Venice, XV: December 12, 2007' 2007 from the exhibition 'Vera Lutter' at Gagosian Gallery, Beverly Hills, California, July - Sept, 2009

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960)
      Campo Santa Sofia, Venice, XV: December 12, 2007
      2007
      Unique gelatin silver print
      68 5/16 × 56 in (173.5 × 142.2cm)

       

       

      I really like this atmospheric work – the scale, the ‘grandness’ of it, the dismemberment through verticality, the immersion into inky darkness – there is something almost subterranean (man living under-earth, under-evolution) about the pictures vestigial structures.

      Dr Marcus Bunyan


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

       

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960) 'Campo Santa Sofia, Venice, XXIII: December 17, 2007' 2007 from the exhibition 'Vera Lutter' at Gagosian Gallery, Beverly Hills, California, July - Sept, 2009

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960)
      Campo Santa Sofia, Venice, XXIII: December 17, 2007
      2007
      Unique gelatin silver print
      85 7/16 × 112 in
      217 × 284.5cm

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960) 'Ca Del Duca Sforza, Venice II: January 13-14, 2008' 2008 from the exhibition 'Vera Lutter' at Gagosian Gallery, Beverly Hills, California, July - Sept, 2009

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960)
      Ca Del Duca Sforza, Venice II: January 13-14, 2008
      2008
      Unique gelatin silver print
      104 1/2 × 168 in
      265.4 × 426.7cm

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960) 'Calle Vallaresso, Venice XXVII: January 31, 2008' 2008

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960)
      Calle Vallaresso, Venice XXVII: January 31, 2008
      2008
      Unique gelatin silver print
      55 3/8 × 68 1/4 in
      140.7 × 173.4cm

       

       

      “Instability, uncertainty, suspense, and monumentality are entities that I consider and think about; they inform my work.”

      ~ Vera Lutter

       

      Gagosian Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of large-scale unique photographs by Vera Lutter. This is her first exhibition in Los Angeles.

      In Lutter’s conceptual approach to the camera obscura, the most rudimentary form of photography, the apparatus records in a very direct and immediate way what exists in the world outside. By choosing to retain the negative image, she transforms the visual facts of her chosen environments into uncanny scenes that reflect on the two principal realities of time and space.

      In recent years, Lutter has made the hauntingly romantic city of Venice an object of prolonged study. Building on her previous recordings of industrial landscapes and cities surrounded by water, such as Old Slip, New York (1995), and Cleveland (1997), the works created in Venice elaborate her intention “to create an image in which the city appears to be suspended above its own reflection, rendering a place that appears to exist outside of gravity.”

      During the anticipated high-water season of 2005, Lutter captured mirage-like emanations of San Marco and Piazza Leoni in which the spectral landmarks appear to hover above their own reflected image in the placid water. Lutter returned to Venice the following year to record the area where the Grand Canal flows into the Bacino, which then opens up into the lagoon. This unstable body of water not only gives Venice its special ethereal character; it also threatens the floating city’s very existence.

      Lutter revisited Venice in 2007 and 2008 to explore further the physical, technical, and architectural complexities of the city. Works such as San Giorgio (2008), Campo Santa Sofia (2007) and Calle Vallaresso (2008) reveal certain innate qualities and conditions of the city that elude direct observation and can be experienced only through her luminous incarnations, the physical image.

      Text from the Gagosian Gallery website [Online] Cited 01/09/2009 no longer available online

       

      Vera Lutter uses the camera obscura, the most basic photographic device, to render in massive form images that serve as faithful transcriptions of immense architectural spaces. The camera obscura was originally developed during the Renaissance as an aid in the recording of the visible world.

      Vera Lutter is best known for monumental black-and-white photographs of cityscapes. Her unique silver gelatin prints are negatives made by transforming a room into a pinhole camera obscura chamber. Directly exposed, often over many hours, onto photosensitive paper, these vistas appear as solarised images, their ethereal platinum tones imbuing the scenes with a haunting melancholy. From an early concentration on the Manhattan skyline, Lutter has turned lately to more industrial sites, including a dry dock, a zeppelin factory, an airport runway, a marina and a deserted warehouse.

      Vera Lutter Biography on the Metro Art Works website [Online] Cited 01/09/2009 no longer available online

       

      Installation view of Vera Lutter at Gagosian Gallery, Beverly Hills

      Installation view of Vera Lutter at Gagosian Gallery, Beverly Hills

       

      Installation views of Vera Lutter works at Gagosian Gallery, Beverly Hills

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960) 'San Giorgio, Venice XVIII: January 26, 2008' 2008

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960)
      San Giorgio, Venice XVIII: January 26, 2008
      2008
      Unique gelatin silver print

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960) 'San Marco, Venice, XIX: December 1, 2005' 2005

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960)
      San Marco, Venice, XIX: December 1, 2005
      2005
      Unique gelatin silver print
      92 ¼ x 112 ¾ in
      234.3 x 286.4cm

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960) 'Ca' del Duca Sforza, Venice XXXI: July 14, 2008' 2008

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960)
      Ca’ del Duca Sforza, Venice XXXI: July 14, 2008
      2008
      Unique gelatin silver print
      56 × 80 3/4 in
      142.2 × 205.1cm

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960) 'Ca del Duca Sforza, Venice, XXXXIII: July 24, 2008' 2008

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960)
      Ca del Duca Sforza, Venice, XXXXIII: July 24, 2008
      2008
      Unique gelatin silver print
      50 1/2 × 67 1/8 in
      128.3 × 170.5cm

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960) 'Ca del Duca, Venice, XA: December 8, 2007' 2007

       

      Vera Lutter (American, b. 1960)
      Ca del Duca, Venice, XA: December 8, 2007
      2007
      Unique gelatin silver print

       

       

      Gagosian Gallery
      456 North Camden Drive
      Beverly Hills, CA 90210
      Phone: 310.271.9400

      Opening hours:
      Monday – Saturday 10am – 6pm

      Gagosian Gallery website

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      Opening: ‘Long Distance Vision: Three Australian Photographers’ at The Ian Potter Centre, NGV Australia, Federation Square, Melbourne

      Exhibition dates: 28th August 2009 – 21st February 2010

      Opening: Thursday 27th August 2009
      Artists: Christine Godden, Max Pam and Matthew Sleeth

       

      Opening night crowd for 'Long Distance Vision' at NGV Australia, Melbourne

       

      Opening night crowd for Long Distance Vision at NGV Australia, Melbourne with Senior Curator of Photography, Dr Isobel Crombie, at left of photograph
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

       

      A small but social opening of the latest photography exhibition at NGV Australia. Wonderful to see Edwin Nicholls and Sophie Gannon from Sophie Gannon Gallery, Richmond in attendance along with Dr Isobel Crombie, Senior Curator of Photography at the NGV and Susan van Wyk, curator of this exhibition and Curator of Photography at the NGV. Also in attendance were the NGV Director, Gerard Vaughan and Frances Lindsay, Deputy Director of the NGV. The exhibition was opened by Associate Professor Christopher Stewart from RMIT University.

      Dr Marcus Bunyan


      Many thankx to Alison Murray and Sue Coffey for allowing me to take photographs of the opening, and for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

       

       

      Opening night crowd for 'Long Distance Vision' at NGV Australia, Melbourne

      Opening night crowd for 'Long Distance Vision' at NGV Australia, Melbourne

      Opening night crowd for 'Long Distance Vision' at NGV Australia, Melbourne

       

      Opening night crowd for Long Distance Vision at NGV Australia, Melbourne
      Photos: Marcus Bunyan

       

       

      Long Distance Vision will include over 60 photographs from the NGV Collection exploring the concept of the ‘tourist gaze’ and its relationship with the three artists.

      Susan van Wyk, Curator Photography, NGV said the exhibition provides a fascinating insight into the unusual perspective brought by the three photographers to their varied world travel destinations.

      “There’s a sense in the works in the exhibition that the photographers are not from the places they choose to photograph, and that each is a visitor delighting in the scenes they encounter.

      What is notable about the photographs in Long Distance Vision is that rather than focussing on the well known scenes that each artist encountered, they have turned their attention to the ‘little things’, the details of the everyday,” said Ms van Wyk.

      From the nineteenth century, photography has been a means by which people could discover the world, initially through personal collection and albums, and later via postcards, magazines, books and the internet.

      Dr Gerard Vaughan, Director, NGV said that both contemporary photographers and tourists use the camera as a means to explore and capture the world.

      “Through their photographs, the three artists featured in Long Distance Vision show us highly individual ways of seeing the world. This exhibition will surprise and delight visitors as our attention is drawn to not only what is different but what remains the same as we travel the world,” said Dr Vaughan.

      Long Distance Vision: Three Australian Photographers is on display at The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia, Federation Square from 28 August 2009 to 21 February 2010. The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia is open every day 10am-5pm. Entry to this exhibition is free.”

      Press release from the NGV

       

      Opening of 'Long Distance Vision' at NGV Australia, Melbourne

      Opening of 'Long Distance Vision' at NGV Australia, Melbourne

       

      Opening night crowd for Long Distance Vision at NGV Australia, Melbourne looking at the work of Max Pam from his Tibet series (see the four images below)
      Photos: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Max Pam (Australian, b. 1949) 'Tibetan man' 1977

       

      Max Pam (Australian, b. 1949)
      Tibetan man
      1977
      Gelatin silver photograph
      20.1 × 20.1cm
      National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
      Purchased, 1979
      © Max Pam

       

      Max Pam (Australian, b. 1949) 'Feet, Thiksè, Ladakh' 1977

       

      Max Pam (Australian, b. 1949)
      Feet, Thiksè, Ladakh
      1977
      Gelatin silver photograph
      20.1 × 20.1cm
      National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
      Purchased, 1979
      © Max Pam

       

      Max Pam (Australian, b. 1949) 'Rinzing lama and his drinking friend, Meru Ladakh' 1977

       

      Max Pam (Australian, b. 1949)
      Rinzing lama and his drinking friend, Meru Ladakh
      1977
      Gelatin silver photograph
      20.1 × 20.1cm
      National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
      Purchased, 1979
      © Max Pam

       

      Max Pam (Australian, b. 1949) 'Man on Tibetan pony, Leh Ladakh' 1977

       

      Max Pam (Australian, b. 1949)
      Man on Tibetan pony, Leh Ladakh
      1977
      Gelatin silver photograph
      20.1 × 20.1cm
      National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
      Purchased, 1979
      © Max Pam

       

      Edwin Nicholls and Sophie Gannon at the opening of 'Long Distance Vision' at NGV Australia, Melbourne

       

      Sophie Gannon and Edwin Nicholls at the opening of Long Distance Vision at NGV Australia, Melbourne
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Dr Isobel Crombie, Senior Curator of Photography at the NGV (left) with Susan can Wyk, Curator of Photography at the NGV and curator of the exhibition (right) at the opening of 'Long Distance Vision'

       

      Dr Isobel Crombie, Senior Curator of Photography at the NGV (left) with Susan van Wyk, Curator of Photography at the NGV and curator of the exhibition (right) at the opening of Long Distance Vision
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Opening night crowd for 'Long Distance Vision' at NGV Australia, Melbourne

      Opening of 'Long Distance Vision' at NGV Australia, Melbourne.

       

      Opening night crowd for Long Distance Vision at NGV Australia, Melbourne looking at the work of Max Pam from his Tibet series (see two images below)
      Photos: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Max Pam (Australian, b. 1949) 'Sisters' 1977

       

      Max Pam (Australian, b. 1949)
      Sisters
      1977
      Gelatin silver photograph
      20.1 × 20.1cm
      National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
      Purchased, 1979
      © Max Pam

       

      Max Pam (Australian, b. 1949) 'Tibetan nomads' 1977

       

      Max Pam (Australian, b. 1949)
      Tibetan nomads
      1977
      Gelatin silver photograph
      20.1 × 20.1cm
      National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
      Purchased, 1979
      © Max Pam

       

       

      The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia Federation Square
      Corner of Russell and 
Flinders Streets, Melbourne

      Opening hours:
      Daily 10am – 5pm

      National Gallery of Victoria website

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      Exhibition: ‘Pierre et Gilles. Retrospective’ at the C/O Berlin Gallery, Berlin

      Exhibition dates: 25th July – 4th October, 2009

       

      Many thankx to the C/O Berlin Gallery for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

       

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953) 'Mercury' 2001 from the exhibition 'Pierre et Gilles. Retrospective' at the C/O Berlin Gallery, Berlin, July - Oct, 2009

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953)
      Mercury
      2001

       

       

      “It’s hard to think of contemporary culture without the influence of Pierre et Gilles, from advertising to fashion photography, music video, and film. This is truly global art.”


      Jeff Koons

       

       

      The cosmos of the worldwide renowned French artist duo is a vivid, colourful world poised between baroque sumptuousness and earthly limbo. Pierre et Gilles create unique hand-painted photographic portraits of film icons, sailors and princes, saints and sinners, of mythological figures and unknowns alike. Pierre et Gilles pursue their own, stunningly unique vision of an enchanted world spanning fairytale paradises and abyssal depths, quoting from popular visual languages and history of art. Again and again, they re-envision their personal dream of reality anew in consummate aesthetic perfection.

      Pierre et Gilles are among the most influential artists of our time. In their complex, multilayered images, they quote from art history, transgress traditional moral codes, and experiment adeptly with social clichés. Their painterly photographic masterpieces exert an intense visual power that leaves the viewer spellbound.

      Over the last thirty years, Pierre et Gilles have created photographic portraits of numerous celebrities including Marc Almond, Mirelle Mathieu, Catherine Deneuve, Serge Gainsbourg, Iggy Pop, Jean-Paul Gaultier, Nina Hagen, Madonna, and Paloma Picasso. They work almost exclusively in an opulently furnished studio, where their subjects are costumed lavishly and placed before three-dimensional backgrounds. Pierre photographs the model, and Gilles retouches and hand-colours the print. The reproducible portrait is rendered unique through painting, which highlights each detail with carefully selected materials and accessories.

      As only venue in Germany, C/O Berlin presents the exhibition as the first of Pierre et Gilles in fifteen years. The show comprised a total of 80 unique large-format works – from their early photographies of the 1970s to the brand new pictures that were never shown in public before.”

      Text from the C/O Berlin website [Online] Cited 20/08/2009 no longer available online

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953) 'St. Sebastian' 1987 from the exhibition 'Pierre et Gilles. Retrospective' at the C/O Berlin Gallery, Berlin, July - Oct, 2009

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953)
      St. Sebastian
      1987

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953) 'Neptune' 1988

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953)
      Neptune
      1988

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953) 'Saint Rose De Lima' 1989

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953)
      Saint Rose De Lima
      1989

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953) 'Le Petit Communiste Christophe' 1990

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953)
      Le Petit Communiste Christophe (The Little Communist Christophe)
      1990

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953) 'Legend' (Madonna) 1990

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953)
      Legend (Madonna)
      1990

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953) 'La Madone au coeur blessé' 1991

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953)
      La Madone au coeur blessé (Madonna with a wounded heart)
      1991

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953) 'St. Sebastian of the Sea' 1994

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953)
      St. Sebastian of the Sea
      1994

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953) 'The Martyrdom of St Sebastian' 1996

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953)
      The Martyrdom of St Sebastian
      1996

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953) 'Extase' (Arielle Dombasle) 2002

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953)
      Extase (Arielle Dombasle)
      2002

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953) 'Le Grand Amour' (Marilyn Manson and Dita von Teese) 2004

       

      Pierre et Gilles (French, Pierre Commoy b. 1950 and Gilles Blanchard, b. 1953)
      Le Grand Amour (Marilyn Manson and Dita von Teese)
      2004

       

       

      C/O Berlin
      Postfuhramt
      Oranienburger Straße 35/36
      10117 Berlin

      Opening hours:
      Daily 11am – 8pm

      C/O Berlin website

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      Opening: ‘Little Treasures’ and ‘Clay Cameras’ at Helen Gory Galerie, Melbourne

      Exhibition dates: 20th August – 5th September, 2009

      Little Treasures Toby Richardson, Will Nolan, CJ Taylor and Steve Wilson

      Clay Cameras Alan Constable

       

      Alan Constable (Australian, b. 1956) 'Not titled (ALE SLR)' 2008. from the exhibition 'Clay Cameras' at Helen Gory Galerie, Melbourne, Aug - Sept, 2009

       

      Alan Constable (Australian, b. 1956)
      Not titled (ALE SLR)
      2008
      Ceramic
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

       

      A small crowd was in attendance for the opening of two new exhibitions at Helen Gory Galerie (due to two auctions, one at Sotheby’s and the other at Deutscher-Menzies). Despite this the crowd was appreciative of the beautifully printed and well presented work. In the main exhibition Little Treasures four photographers show various bodies of work. Toby Richardson’s stained pillows (Portrait of the artist) from the years 1986-2003 were effective in their muted tones and ‘thickened’ spatio-temporal identity. CJ Taylor’s winged detritus from the taxidermist were haunting in their mutilated beauty. Steve Wilson’s sometimes legless flies were startling in their precision, attitude/altitude and, as someone noted, they looked like jet fighters! Finally my favourite of this quartet were the recyco-pop iridescent bottle tops of Will Nolan – “these objects remain enigmatic, resonating with a sense of mystery, hidden thoughts and unknown histories.” (Lauren Tomczak, catalogue text).

      Some good work then in this take on found, then lost and found again treasure trove, work that retrieves and sustains traces of life, history and memory in the arcana of discarded and dissected objects.

      The hit of the night for me was the work of Alan Constable, his “objects that see”. I found his clay cameras intoxicating – I wanted to own one (always a good sign). I loved the exaggerated form and colours, the playfulness of the creativity on display. Being a photographer I went around trying to work out the different makes of these scratched and highly glazed cameras without looking at the exhibition handout. For a very reasonable price you could own one of these seductive (is that the right word, I think it is) viewfinders and they were selling like hot cakes!

      Dr Marcus Bunyan


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

       

       

      Little Treasures

      “Wings, pillows, flies and bottle tops are blown up vastly in stunning large scale prints that take the viewer through the looking glass into another universe, their brilliant colour and rich detail revealing unexpected beauty and delight in these forgotten things. Unmanipulated and finely printed, these images are the product of each artist’s technical mastery and inquisitive eye finding beauty in the cast off and delight in the ignored.” (Jemima Kemp, 2009)

       

      Installation view of 'Little Treasures' showing the work of Toby Richardson 'Portrait of the Artist' series at Helen Gory Galerie, Melbourne

       

      Installation view of Little Treasures showing Toby Richardson’s Portrait of the Artist series (2009, left)
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Opening night crowd at 'Little Treasures'

      Installation view of 'Little Treasures' showing the work of CJ Taylor (left) and Will Nolan 'Bottle Top' series (2009, right) series at Helen Gory Galerie, Melbourne

       

      Installation view of Little Treasures showing the work of CJ Taylor (2009, left) and Will Nolan’s Bottle Top series (2009, right)
      Photos: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Installation view of 'Little Treasures' showing the work of CJ Taylor (2009)

       

      Installation view of Little Treasures showing the work of CJ Taylor (2009)
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

      CJ Taylor (Australian, b. 1951) 'Blue, turquoise yellow green' 2009 from the exhibition 'Little Treasures' at Helen Gory Galerie, Melbourne, Aug - Sept, 2009

       

      CJ Taylor (Australian, b. 1951)
      Blue, turquoise yellow green
      2009
      Acrylic glass pigment print
      110 x 79cm

       

      CJ Taylor (Australian, b. 1951) 'Blue, Blue, Grey' 2009 from the exhibition 'Little Treasures' at Helen Gory Galerie, Melbourne, Aug - Sept, 2009

       

      CJ Taylor (Australian, b. 1951)
      Blue, Blue, Grey
      2009
      Acrylic glass pigment print
      110 x 79cm

       

      Installation view of 'Little Treasures' showing the work of Will Nolan 'Bottle Top' series (2009) at Helen Gory Galerie, Melbourne

       

      Installation view of Little Treasures showing Will Nolan’s Bottle Top series (2009)
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Will Nolan (Australian) 'Bottle top #10' 2009

       

      Will Nolan (Australian)
      Bottle top #10
      2009

       

      Will Nolan (Australian) 'Bottle top #1' 2009

       

      Will Nolan (Australian)
      Bottle top #1
      2009

       

      Installation view of 'Little Treasures' showing the work of Steve Wilson 'Fly' series (2009) at Helen Gory Galerie, Melbourne

       

      Installation view of Little Treasures showing Steve Wilson’s Fly series (2009)
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

       

      Clay Cameras

      “From the box brownie to disposables, VHS to SLR, these works explore Alan Constable’s fascination with cameras. Unlike the streamlined design of the originals, Constable’s cameras appear soft, organic and malleable.”

       

      Alan Constable (Australian, b. 1956) 'Not titled (pearlescent gold/black Leica)' 2008

       

      Alan Constable (Australian, b. 1956)
      Not titled (pearlescent gold/black Leica)
      2008
      Ceramic
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Installation view of 'Clay Cameras' at Helen Gory Galerie, Melbourne

       

      Installation view of Clay Cameras by Alan Constable
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Alan Constable (Australian, b. 1956) 'Not titled (Hasselblad)' 2008

       

      Alan Constable (Australian, b. 1956)
      Not titled (Hasselblad)
      2008
      Ceramic
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Alan Constable (Australian, b. 1956) 'Not titled (Digital with zoom lens)' 2009

       

      Alan Constable (Australian, b. 1956)
      Not titled (Digital with zoom lens)
      2009
      Ceramic
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

       

      Helen Gory Galerie

      This gallery is now closed.

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      Exhibition: ‘Intersections Intersected: The Photography of David Goldblatt’ at the New Museum, New York

      Exhibition dates: 15th July – 11th October, 2009

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018) 'Family at Lunch, Wheatlands Plots, Randfontein, September 1962' 1962 from the exhibition 'Intersections Intersected: The Photography of David Goldblatt' at the New Museum, New York, July - Oct, 2009

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018)
      Family at Lunch, Wheatlands Plots, Randfontein, September 1962
      1962
      Gelatin silver print

       

       

      One of the greats.

      Marcus


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

       

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018) 'A new shack under construction, Lenasia Extension 9, Gauteng' 1990 from the exhibition 'Intersections Intersected: The Photography of David Goldblatt' at the New Museum, New York, July - Oct, 2009

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018)
      A new shack under construction, Lenasia Extension 9, Gauteng
      1990
      Gelatin silver print

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018) 'Monuments celebrating the Republic of South Africa (left and JG Strijdom, former prime minister (right), with the headquarters of Volkskas Bank, Pretoria. 25 April 1982' 1982

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018)
      Monuments celebrating the Republic of South Africa (left and JG Strijdom, former prime minister (right), with the headquarters of Volkskas Bank, Pretoria. 25 April 1982
      1982
      Black and while photograph on matte paper
      Courtesy the artist and Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018) 'Man with an injured arm. Hillbrow, Johannesburg, June, 1972' 1972

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018)
      Man with an injured arm. Hillbrow, Johannesburg, June, 1972
      1972
      Black and while photograph on matte paper
      Courtesy the artist and Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018) 'Mofolo South, Soweto, September 1972' 1972

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018)
      Mofolo South, Soweto, September 1972
      1972
      Gelatin silver print

       

       

      Over the last fifty years, David Goldblatt has documented the complexities and contradictions of South African society. His photographs capture the social and moral value systems that governed the tumultuous history of his country’s segregationist policies and continue to influence its changing political landscape. Goldblatt began photographing professionally in the early 1960s, focusing on the effects of the National Party’s legislation of apartheid. The son of Jewish Lithuanian parents who fled to South Africa to escape religious persecution, Goldblatt was forced into a peculiar situation, being at once a white man in a racially segregated society and a member of a religious minority with a sense of otherness. He used the camera to capture the true face of apartheid as his way of coping with horrifying realities and making his voice heard. Goldblatt did not try to capture iconic images, nor did he use the camera as a tool to entice revolution through propaganda. Instead, he reveals a much more complex portrait, including the intricacies and banalities of daily life in all aspects of society. Whether showing the plight of black communities, the culture of the Afrikaner nationalists, the comfort of white suburbanites, or the architectural landscape, Goldblatt’s photographs are an intimate portrayal of a culture plagued by injustice.

      In Goldblatt’s images we can see a universal sense of people’s aspirations, making do with their abnormal situation in as normal a way as possible. People go about their daily lives, trying to preserve a sense of decency amid terrible hardship. Goldblatt points out a connection between people (including himself) and the environment, and how the environment reflects the ideologies that built it. His photographs convey a sense of vulnerability as well as dignity. Goldblatt is very much a part of the culture that he is analysing. Unlike the tradition of many documentary photographers who capture the “decisive moment,” Goldblatt’s interest lies in the routine existence of a particular time in history.

      Goldblatt continues to explore the consciousness of South African society today. He looks at the condition of race relations after the end of apartheid while also tackling other contemporary issues, such as the influence of the AIDS epidemic and the excesses of consumption. For his “Intersections Intersected” series, Goldblatt looks at the relationship between the past and present by pairing his older black-and-white images with his more recent colour work. Here we may notice photography’s unique association with time: how things were, how things are, and also that the effects of apartheid run deep. It will take much more time to heal the wounds of a society that was divided for so long. Yet, there is a possibility for hope, recognition of how much has changed politically in the time between the two images, and a potential optimism for the future. Goldblatt’s work is a dynamic and multilayered view of life in South Africa, and he continues to reveal that society’s progress and incongruities.”

      Joseph Gergel, Curatorial Fellow

      Text from the New Museum website [Online] Cited 15/08/2009. No longer available online

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018) 'Wreath at the Berg-en-Dal Monument' 1983

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018)
      Wreath at the Berg-en-Dal Monument which commemorates the courage – and the sarcophagus which holds the bones – of 60 men of the South African Republic Police, who died here 27 August 1900 in a critical battle of the Anglo-Boer War. Dalmanutha, Mpumalanga. December 1983.
      1983
      Courtesy the artist and Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018) 'The swimming bath rules at the rec, Cape Blue Asbestos Mine, Koegas, Northern Cape' 2002

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018)
      The swimming bath rules at the rec, Cape Blue Asbestos Mine, Koegas, Northern Cape
      2002

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018) 'The mill, Pomfret Asbestos Mine, Pomfret, North-West Province, 20 December 2002' 2002

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018)
      The mill, Pomfret Asbestos Mine, Pomfret, North-West Province, 20 December 2002
      2002

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018) 'Johannesburg from the Southwest' 2003

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018)
      Johannesburg from the Southwest
      2003

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018) 'Incomplete houses, part of a stalled municipal development of 1000 houses. Lady Grey, Eastern Cape, 5 August 2006' 2006

       

      David Goldblatt (South African, 1930-2018)
      Incomplete houses, part of a stalled municipal development of 1000 houses. Lady Grey, Eastern Cape, 5 August 2006
      2006

       

       

      New Museum
      235 Bowery
      New York, NY 10002
      212.219.1222

      Opening hours:
      Tuesday – Sunday 11am – 6pm

      New Museum website

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