Photograph: The Passing of Memory: resurrecting a photograph for the series ‘The Shape of Dreams’

March 2009

 

Marcus Bunyan (Australian born England, b. 1958) 'Oakland, 7-'51' from the series 'The Shape of Dreams' 2009

 

Marcus Bunyan (Australian born England, b. 1958)
Oakland, 7-’51 from the series The Shape of Dreams (restored)
2009

 

 

“Fragments of harmonic lines assemble and collapse as the meaning of each interval must be continually revised in light of the unfolding precession of further terms in an ultimately unsustainable syntax. The mind’s ear tries to remember the sum of passing intervals, but without the ability to incorporate them into larger identifiable units each note inevitably lapses back into silence, surrendered to the presence of the currently sounding tone, itself soon to give way to another newly isolated note in its turn.”


Craig Dworkin1

 

 

The Passing of Memory

Thinking about this photograph

I bought an album on Ebay that contained an anonymous aviator with snapshots of his life: photographs of him in Oakland, California, Cologne in Germany and flying out of Italy – photos of his buddies and the work they did, the places they visited, the fun they had.

This one photograph has haunted me more than the rest.

Who was he? What was his life like? Do he get married and have children? Is he still alive?

When scanned the image was so dirty, so degraded, that I spent 7 weeks of my life cleaning and restoring the photograph working all hours of the day and night. I was obsessive almost to the point of obstinacy. Many times I nearly gave up as I thought the task impossible – thousands of dots and hairs inhabited the surface of the image and, surely, it was just another photograph one of millions that circle the world. Why expend so much energy just to resurrect this one particular image?

Some things that can be said about this photograph

It is small measuring only 9cm high by 7.5 cm wide

It is printed on cheap glossy photographic paper which now has a slight yellow tinge to it.

The image is creased at top left.

The back is annotated ‘Oakland, 7-’51’

The dark roundel with the wing on the side of the aircraft has faint text that spells out the words ‘AERO ACE’.

There is no engine in the aircraft and it looks from the parts lying on the ground that the aircraft is being broken up or used for spares.

The man is wearing work overalls with unidentifiable insignia on them, a worker on the aircraft being dismantled or just a fitter on the base.

Someone standing on the ground has obviously called out the man’s name and he has turned around in response to the call and lent forward and put out his hand in greeting – a beautiful spontaneous response – and the photograph has been taken.

Some other things that can be said about this photograph, in passing

The sun splashes the man’s face. He smiles at the camera.

His arm rests gently on the metal of the aircraft, shielded from the sun.

Perhaps he wears a ring on his fifth finger.

He is blind.

This photograph is an individual, isolated note in the fabric of time. It could easily pass into silence as memory and image fade from view. Memories of the individual form the basis for remembering and photographs act as an aide-memoire both for individual memory and the collective memory that flows from individual memory. Memory is always and only partial and fragmentary – who is remembering, what are they remembering, when do they remember, what prompts them to remember and how these memories are incorporated into the collective memory, an always mediated phenomenon that manifests itself in the actions and statements of individuals, are important questions.

Images are able to trigger memories and emotional responses to a particular time and place, but since this photograph has no personal significance what is going on here? Why did I cry when I was restoring it? What emotional association was happening inside me?

“To remember is always to give a reading of the past, a reading which requires linguistic skills derived from the traditions of explanation and story-telling within a culture and which [presents] issues in a narrative that owes its meaning ultimately to the interpretative practices of a community of speakers. This is true even when what is remembered is one’s own past experience… [The] mental image of the past … becomes a phenomenon of consciousness only when clothed with words, and these owe their meaning to social practices of communication.”2


His blindness stares at us while underneath his body walks away into his passing.

I have become the speaker for this man, for this image.

His brilliant face is our brilliant face.

In this speaking, the phenomenon of making the image conscious, the gap between image and presence, between the photo and its shadow has collapsed. There is no past and present but a collective resonance that has presence in images.

“Such reasoning questions the separation of past and present in a fundamental way. As a consequence it becomes fruitless to discuss whether or not a particular event or process remembered corresponds to the actual past: all that matters are the specific conditions under which such memory is constructed as well as the personal and social implications of memories held.”3

‘The personal and social implications of memories held’. Or not held, if images are lost in passing.

It is such a joyous image, the uplifted hand almost in supplication. I feel strong connection to this man. I bring his presence into consciousness in my life, and by my thinking into the collective memory. Perhaps the emotional response is that as I get older photographs of youth remind me of the passing of time more strongly. Perhaps the image reminds me of the smiling father I never had. These are not projections of my own feelings but resonances held in the collective memory.

As Susan Sontag has observed,

“Remembering is an ethical act, has ethical value in and of itself. Memory is, achingly, the only relation we can have with the dead. So the belief that remembering is an ethical act is deep in our natures as humans, who know we are going to die, and who mourn those who in the normal course of things die before us – grandparents, parents, teachers and older friends.”4


Remembering is an ethical act.Ā It is also a voluntary act. We can choose not to remember. We can choose to forget.Ā In this photograph I choose to remember, to not let pass into the dark night of the soul.Ā My mind, eyes and heart are open.

This is not a simulacra of an original image but an adaptation, an adaptation that tries to find resonances between past and present, between image and shadow. As such this photograph is no longer an isolated tone that inevitably lapses back into silence but part of a bracketing of time that is convulsingly beautiful in it’s illumination, it’s presence. The individual as collective, collected memory present for all to see.

The form of formlessness, the shape of dreams.

Dr Marcus Bunyan

 

1/ Dworkin, Craig. “Grammar Degree Zero (Introduction to Re-Writing Freud)” (2005) [Online] Cited 23rd March, 2009 (no longer available online)

2/ Holtorf, Cornelius. “Social Memory,” part of a doctoral thesisĀ Monumental Past:Ā The Life-histories of Megalithic Monuments in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern (Germany) submitted 1998Ā [Online] Cited 23/03/2009

3/ Ibid.,

4/ Sontag, Susan. Regarding the Pain of Others. London: Hamish Hamilton, 2003, p. 103

     

     

    Marcus Bunyan (Australian born England, b. 1958) 'Oakland, 7-'51' from the series 'The Shape of Dreams' 2009 (detail before cleaning)

    Before

     

    Marcus Bunyan (Australian born England, b. 1958) 'Oakland, 7-'51' from the series 'The Shape of Dreams' 2009 (detail after cleaning)

    After

     

    Marcus Bunyan (Australian born England, b. 1958) 'Oakland, 7-'51' from the series 'The Shape of Dreams' 2009 (detail before cleaning)

    Before

     

    Marcus Bunyan (Australian born England, b. 1958) 'Oakland, 7-'51' from the series 'The Shape of Dreams' 2009 (detail after cleaning)

    After

     

    Marcus Bunyan (Australian born England, b. 1958) 'Oakland, 7-'51' from the series 'The Shape of Dreams' 2009 (detail before cleaning)

    Before

     

    Marcus Bunyan (Australian born England, b. 1958) 'Oakland, 7-'51' from the series 'The Shape of Dreams' 2009 (detail after cleaning)

    After

     

    Marcus Bunyan (Australian born England, b. 1958) 'Oakland, 7-'51' from the series 'The Shape of Dreams' 2009 (detail before cleaning)

    Before

     

    Marcus Bunyan (Australian born England, b. 1958) 'Oakland, 7-'51' from the series 'The Shape of Dreams' 2009 (detail after cleaning)

    After

     

    Marcus Bunyan (Australian born England, b. 1958) 'Oakland, 7-'51' from the series 'The Shape of Dreams' 2009 (detail before cleaning)

    Before

     

    Marcus Bunyan. 'Oakland, 7-'51' from the series 'The Shape of Dreams' 2009

    After

     

     

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    Review: ‘Order and disorder: archives and photography’ at the National Gallery of Victoria International, Melbourne

    Exhibition dates:Ā 18th October, 2008 – 19th April, 2009

     

    Patrick PoundĀ (New Zealander, b. 1962, worked in Australia 1989- ) 'Writing in a library' 1996 from the exhibition 'Order and disorder: archives and photography' at the National Gallery of Victoria International, Melbourne, October, 2008 - April, 2009

     

    Patrick Pound (New Zealander, b. 1962, worked in Australia 1989- )
    Writing in a library
    1996
    Photocopies, oil stick, card
    169.4 x 127.2cm (image); 180.2 x 137.2cm (sheet)
    National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
    Purchased, 1997
    Ā© Patrick Pound  

     

     

    “These fragments I have shored against my ruins.”


    T.S. Eliot

     

     

    An interesting exhibition is presented in the [now closed] permanent third floor photography gallery at NGV International, Melbourne on a subject that deserved a much more rigorous investigation than could been undertaken in this small gallery space. Presenting single works by Ed Ruscha, Bernd and Hilla Becher, Patrick Pound, Robert Rooney, Simon Obarzanek, Penelope Davis, Candid Hofer, Linda Judge and Charles Green and Lyndell Brown the works seek to investigate the nature of the relationship between photography and the archive, between the semi-permanences of an archival memory and the spaces of a transgressive intertexuality marked by fragmentary, ironic counter-performances.

    As noted in the catalogue essay by NGV curator Maggie Finch the archive is a place for holding knowledge that contains elements of truth and error, order and disorder; archives are able to shape history and memory, depending on how, when and by whom the records are accessed. Any disruption of order, governance and authority can lead to alternative readings and interpretations as the arcane ‘mysteries’ of the methods of classification are overturned. Since Victorian times when the body came under the self-surveillance of the camera and was found wanting, photographs have documented the faces of criminals, the physiognomy of degeneration and the fever of war.

    As Yiannis Papatheodorou has observed when reviewing Jacques Derrida Mal d’Archive,

    “Derrida declares that since the dominant power of the archive derives from the economy of knowledge, it also provides the institutional responsibility of the interpretation. The localisation of the information transforms the inscription, provided by the function of the archive, into the impression of a memory’s trace, conscious or unconscious …

    The preservation of memory, the access to information, the “resources” of the sources and the working environment are not just the representation of a future memory. They are active practices and discourses that create hierarchies and exclusions. The archives are the languages of the past, activated however dialogically, according to scientific and social demands. The content of our choice is marked by the way we are seeking information. Far from being an abstract principle, our choice is an ideologically oriented negotiation closely related to the politics of interpretation.”1


    And there’s the rub. Not only is this exhibition a reordering of an unpublished memory (for that is what an archive is, a unique unpublished memory), it is also a reiteration of the authority of the gallery itself, the “institutional responsibility of the interpretation.”2Ā Deciding what was in this exhibition and what to leave out creates hierarchies of inclusion and exclusion – and in this case the inclusions are mainly ‘safe’ works, ones that challenge the ontology of existence, the cataloguing of reality in a slightly ironic way but oh – nothing too shocking! nothing too disordered! Nothing here then of the archive of images that substantiate the horrors of war, the trans/disfiguration of men in both World Wars for example. There are few images to haunt us, none to refresh our memories in a problematic way.

    The more successful pieces, the works that challenge the order of the archive (“what is no longer archived in the same way is no longer lived in the same way”)3, are the ones by Ed Ruscha, Penelope Davis and Simon Obarzaneck (all below).

    Ruscha’s vertical inverted cityscape is trapped in a display cabinet opened out on the horizontal plane in concertina format, like one of those optical illusion images in which you see an image looking from one direction and a different image from the other direction. Ruscha’s personal experience of driving down Sunset Strip in Los Angeles and his anthropological recording of the urban experience has been disseminated in a mass produced ‘artists’ book. No unique unpublished archive here. Beneath the facades of the shops other narratives emerge – images are stitched together, cars chopped off, people dismembered – all in a very linear, conceptual way; a journey from one point to another, one that is both subjective (the voice  and hand of the author) and objective (the en masse production of the book).

    As Chris Balaschak has noted, “The images, taken during the day, capture only the facades of the buildings. Ignorance is given to cars or people, both of which are often cut in half between separate exposures. The imperfections of matching the facades are cracks along Ruscha’s drive. Through these cracks we find Ruscha, not such an anonymous author after all. Splitting cars in two, and mismatching facades we become keenly aware of the passage of time. The facades of buildings may appear as stage sets but they are active points on other itineraries, anticipating future and past narratives.”4


    This is Ruscha’s trace through the city but also our intersection with his journey, our chance to make our own itineraries as Balaschak (in his insightful writing) rightly points out. The fragmentary dismembering becomes the space between, the disorder of the linear into a heterotopic space of remembering. We the viewer create our own narrative, flitting through the cracks in the archive of memory, the photographer, the author of our own journey.

    Penelope Davis photograms are luminous objects. She makes resin casts of the spine of discarded books and places the casts directly onto photographic paper and then exposes them to light. The books glow and hover in the blackness, the words on the spine reversed. Stripped of their context, of their memory, they become ethereal books, phantom texts, liminal images that hover between what is known and what is imagined. As Davis has said, “Most people assume that when they look at a photo that they are looking at the thing photographed – but they are not. They are looking at a photo. Books and photographic images and archives are enigmatic – you can’t be sure of a singular definition or meaning.”

    Davis is ‘messing around’ with the idea of veracity, the truth of photography and the ordering of the archive of our mind through the images we collate. We seek to grasp the original memory of an event, of the reading and ordering of our life through images and none is available to us, for as Foucault has observed memories are only ever fragmentary and distorted representations, partial truths a best. Like Jorge Luis Borges’ journey into the infinite universe of The Library of Babel, for Foucault the psyche is not an archive but a mirror, like the shining silver foil surface of the cover of the Ed Ruscha book:

    “The search for the self is a journey into a mental labyrinth that takes random courses and ultimately ends at impasses. The memory fragments recovered along the way cannot provide us with a basis for interpreting the overall meaning of the journey. The meanings that we derive from our memories are only partial truths, and their value is ephemeral. For Foucault, the psyche is not an archive but only a mirror. To search the psyche for the truth about ourselves is a futile task because the psyche can only reflect the images we have conjured up to describe ourselves. Looking into the psyche, therefore, is like looking into the mirror image of a mirror. One sees oneself reflected in an image of infinite regress. Our gaze is led not toward the substance of our beginnings but rather into the meaninglessness of previously discarded images of the self.”5


    This leads us nicely onto the images of Simon Obarzanek.

    In a fantastic series of photographs, the only ones of this exhibition that seemed to haunt me (as Susan Sontag says images do), Obarzanek photographs people in an ordered, almost scientific, manner. Photographed face on against a non-contextual background using a low depth of field, these repetitive, collective, unnamed people remind me of the images of Galton. But here the uniformity is overwhelmed by quirky differences – the placement of eyes and lips seem large offering a strange, surreal physiognomy. These images resonate, the challenge, they remain with you, they question the order of things as no other photograph in this exhibition does. From simplicity comes eloquence.

    To finish I must address the elephant in the room, in fact two elephants!

    There is not one digital photograph contained in the exhibition, the work being collage, Type C colour or black and white silver gelatin prints. There is no mention in the catalogue of the crisis of cultural memory that is now permeating our world. Some believe the ever expanding digital archive, the Internet, threatens our lived memories “amidst the process of the ‘digitisation of culture’ and the new possibilities of storing.”6 This vision entails the fear of loosing cultural contents, hitting the delete button so that  memory passes into forgetting. This is a vision to which I do not subscribe, but the issue needed to be addressed in this exhibition: how are digital technologies altering our re-assemblance of memory, altering photography’s ability inherent ability to record, store and organise visual images? What about the aura of the original or was there never such a thing?

    Furthermore, it would seem that with photographs becoming less and less a fixed essence; with the meaning of the photograph more and more divorced from its referent; with the spectators look the key to reading photographs; and the performance of the photograph a cut and paste reality… then perhaps we are left not with the two polar opposites of order and disorder but some orthogonal spaces in-between.

    The second elephant in the room in the gallery space itself.

    Whilst the curators of photography at the National Gallery of Victoria do an amazing job running large exhibitions such as the Andreas Gursky and Rennie Ellis shows that have starred this year, the NGV ‘International’ is shooting itself in the foot with the current permanent photography gallery space. Small, jaded and dour it seems an addendum to other larger spaces in the gallery and to be honest photography and Melbourne deserves better. Personally I feel more alive in the fashion gallery that is on the floor below and that, for an photographer, is a hard thing to say.

    As the theme for this exhibition deserved a greater in depth investigation so the gallery needs to expand it’s horizons and give the permanent photography gallery a redesign and overhaul. Where is the life and passion of contemporary photography displayed in a small space for all to see in a gallery that sees itself as ‘International’? In an occularcentric world the key word is intertexuality: the gallery space should reflect the electri-city, the mixing of a gallery design ethos with images to surround us in a space that makes us passionate about contemporary photography. Now that would really be a new order of things!

    Dr Marcus Bunyan

     

    1/ Papatheodorou, Yiannis. History in the promised land of memory. Review of  Jacques Derrida, Mal d’Archive, Paris, Ɖd. GalilĆ©e, 1995 [Online] Cited on 20th March 2009 (no longer available online)

    2/ “The archive is understood as collective reservoir of knowledge fulfilling diverse functions and conditioned by three main factors: conservation, selection and accessibility. How are contents stored and which media are used to conserve them? What is selected for storage and what is decided to be cleared out and thus forgotten? Who decides what is archived and who has access to the resources? All these questions paint the archive as a political space where relations of power cross aspects of culture and collective identity.”
    Assmann, A. (2003) Erinnerungsräume, Formen und Wandlungen des kulturellen Gedächtnis. [Memory Spaces, Forms and Transformations of Cultural Memory] Special paperback editon, 1st edition publ. 1999, München: Beck, p. 343-346

    3/ Derrida, Jacques. (1996) Archive Fever, A Freudian Impression. Transl. by E. Prenowitz, p. 18 orig. publ. as Mal d’Archive: une impression freudienne in 1995, Chicago, London: The University of Chicago Press

    4/ Balaschak, Chris. Itineraries [part 3] [Online] Cited on 20th March 2009 (no longer available online)

    5/ Hutton, Patrick. “Foucault, Freud, and the Technologies of the Self,” in Martin, Luther and Gutman, Huck and Hutton, Patrick (eds.,). Technologies of the Self: A Seminar with Michel Foucault. London: Tavistock Publications, 1988, p. 139

    6/ Featherstone, M. (2000) “Archiving Cultures,” in British Journal of Sociology, 51(1), pp. 161-184


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

     

     

    Ed RuschaĀ (American, b. 1937) 'Every Building on Sunset Strip' 1966 from the exhibition 'Order and disorder: archives and photography' at the National Gallery of Victoria International, Melbourne, October, 2008 - April, 2009

    Ed RuschaĀ (American, b. 1937) 'Every Building on Sunset Strip' 1966 from the exhibition 'Order and disorder: archives and photography' at the National Gallery of Victoria International, Melbourne, October, 2008 - April, 2009

    Ed RuschaĀ (American, b. 1937) 'Every Building on Sunset Strip' 1966

    Ed RuschaĀ (American, b. 1937) 'Every Building on Sunset Strip' 1966

     

    Ed Ruscha (American, b. 1937)
    Every building on the Sunset Strip
    1966
    Artist book: photo-offset lithographs, letterpress, concertina, cardboard cover, silver-coated plastic-covered slipcase, 1st edition
    17.8 x 760.7cm (open); 17.8 x 14.4 x 0.8cm (closed); 18.6 x 14.6 x 1.4cm (slipcase)
    Private collection, Melbourne
    Ā© Ed Ruscha, courtesy Gagosian Gallery, New York

     

    Penelope DavisĀ (Australian, b. 1963) 'Shelf' 2008

     

    Penelope DavisĀ (Australian, b. 1963)
    Shelf
    2008
    From the Fiction-Non-Fiction series 2007-2008
    Type C photograph
    90.0 x 70.0cm
    National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
    Purchased, Victorian Foundation for Living Australian Artists, 2008

     

    Archives contain elements of truth and error, order and disorder and are infinitely fascinating. As both collections of records and repositories of data, archives are able to shape history and memory depending on how, when and by whom the materials are accessed. Their vastness allows for multiple readings to be unravelled over time.

    Photography is naturally associated with archives because of its inherent ability to record, store and organise visual images. With this in mind, this exhibition brings together artists drawn largely from the permanent collection of the NGV who explore the idea of archives as complex, living and occasionally mysterious systems of knowledge. Several of the selected artists act as archivists, collecting and ordering their own unique bodies of photographs, while others create disorder by critiquing the ideas and systems of archives.

    Text from the NGV International website [Online] Cited 13/06/2022

     

    Simon ObarzanekĀ (Israeli/Australian, b. 1968, worked in United States 1995-2001) '6 faces from 123 faces' 2000-2002

     

    Simon Obarzanek (Israeli/Australian, b. 1968, worked in United States 1995-2001)
    6 faces from 123 faces
    2000-2002
    Gelatin silver photographs
    (a) 33.1 x 25.4cm; (b) 33.4 x 25.4cm; (c) 33.2 x 25.3cm; (d) 33.4 x 25.4cm; (e) 33.4 x 25.4cm; (f) 33.4 x 25.4cm
    National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
    Purchased with funds arranged by Loti Smorgon for Contemporary Australian Photography, 2003
    Ā© Simon Obarzanek

     

    Simon ObarzanekĀ (Israeli/Australian 1968-, worked in United States 1995-2001) 'Box Hill girl' 2000-2002

     

    Simon Obarzanek (Israeli/Australian, b. 1968, worked in United States 1995-2001)
    Box Hill girl
    2000-2002
    Gelatin silver photograph
    33.4 Ɨ 25.4cm
    National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
    Purchased with funds arranged by Loti Smorgon for Contemporary Australian Photography, 2003
    Ā© Simon Obarzanek

     

    Simon ObarzanekĀ (Israeli/Australian 1968-, worked in United States 1995-2001) 'Boy with eyes' 2000-2002

     

    Simon Obarzanek (Israeli/Australian, b. 1968, worked in United States 1995-2001)
    Boy with eyes
    2000-2002
    Gelatin silver photograph
    33.4 Ɨ 25.4cm
    National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
    Purchased with funds arranged by Loti Smorgon for Contemporary Australian Photography, 2003
    Ā© Simon Obarzanek

     

    Candida Hƶfer (German, b. 1944) 'Teylers Museum Haarlem II' 2003

     

    Candida Hƶfer (German, b. 1944)
    Teylers Museum Haarlem II
    2003
    Type C photograph
    150.0 x 120.0cm
    National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
    Purchased, 2004
    © Candida Höfer/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn. Licensed by Copyright Agency, Australia

     

    Bernd and Hilla Becher (German, 1931-2007 and 1934-2015) 'Coal tipple, Goodspring, Pennsylvania' 1975

     

    Bernd and Hilla Becher (German, 1931-2007 and 1934-2015)
    Coal tipple, Goodspring, Pennsylvania
    1975
    From the Artists and photographs folio 1975
    Gelatin silver photographs
    24.0 Ɨ 33.9cm (image and sheet) 40.7 Ɨ 49.6cm (support)
    National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
    Purchased, 1976

     

     

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    National Gallery of Victoria website

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    Exhibition: ‘Hyper’ by Denis Darzacq at Australian Centre for Photography (ACP), Sydney

    Exhibition dates: 13th March – 12th April, 2009

     

    Denis Darzacq (French, b. 1961) 'Hyper #4' 2007 from the exhibition 'Hyper' by Denis Darzacq at Australian Centre for Photography (ACP), Sydney, March - April, 2009

     

    Denis Darzacq (French, b. 1961)
    Hyper #4
    2007

     

     

    These images form an interesting body of work: levitating bodies suspended between heaven and earth, neither here nor there, form a hyper-real image grounded in the context of the fluorescent isles of French supermarkets. The mainly anonymous humans look like mannequins in their inertness, frozen at the moment of throwing themselves/being thrown into the consumer environment. After his brilliant series La Chute (The Fall) Darzacq has taken people gathered in a casting call from around the town of Rouen and made their frozen bodies complicit in the mass production of the supermarket and the mass consumption of the image as tableaux vivant: the mise en scĆØne directed by the photographer to limited effect. There is something unsettling about these images but ultimately they are unrewarding, as surface as the environment the bodies are suspended in, and perhaps this is the point.

    Suspension of bodies is not a new idea in photography. Jacques Henri Lartigue used the freeze frame to good effect long before Henri Cartier-Bresson came up with his ‘decisive moment’: playing with the effect of speed and gravity in an era of Futurism, Lartigue used the arrested movement of instant photography then afforded by smaller cameras and faster film to capture the spirit of liberation in the ‘Belle Epoque’ period before the First World War.

    “All the jumping and flying in Lartigue’s photographs, it looks like the whole world at the turn of the century is on springs or something. There’s a kind of spirit of liberation that’s happening at the time and Lartigue matches that up with what stop action photography can do at the time, so you get these really dynamic pictures. And for Lartigue part of the joke, most of the time, is that these people look elegant but they are doing these crazy stunts.”1


    One of the greatest, if not the greatest ever, series of photographs of levitating bodies is that by American photographer Aaron Siskind. Called Pleasures and Terrors of LevitationĀ (sometimes reversed as Terrors and Pleasures of LevitationĀ as on theĀ George Eastman House website)Ā the images feature divers suspended in mid-air with the sky as their blank, background canvas. The images formal construction makes the viewer concentrate on the state of the body, its positioning in the air, and the look on the face of some of the divers caught between joy and fear.

    “Highly formal, yet concerned with their subject as well as the idea they communicate, the ‘Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation’ photographs depict the dark shapes of divers suspended mid-leap against a blank white sky. Shot with a hand-held twin-lens reflex camera at the edge of Lake Michigan in Chicago, the balance and conflict suggested by the series’ title is evident in the divers’ sublime contortions.”2


    Perhaps because of their air of balance and conflict we can return to these vibrant images again and againĀ and they never loose their freshness, intensity and wonder. The same cannot be said of Denis Darzacq’sĀ Hyper photographs. Slick and surface like the consumer society on which they comment the somnambulistic bodies are more like floating helium balloons, perhaps even tortured souls leaving the earth. Reminiscent of the magicians trick where the girl is suspended and a hoop passed around her body to prove the suspension is real these photographs really are more smoke and mirrors than any comment on the binary between being and having as some commentators (such asĀ Amy Barrett-Lennard, Director Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts) have suggested. There is no spirit of liberation here, no sublime revelation as the seemingly lifeless bodies are trapped between the supermarket shelves, as oblivious to and as anonymous as the products that surround them. The well shot images perhaps possess a sense of fun, if I am being generous, as Darzacq plays with our understanding of reality… but are they more than that or is the Emperor just wearing very thin consumer clothing?

    Dr Marcus Bunyan

     

    1/ Kevin Moore (Lartigue biographer) quoted in “Genius of Photography,” on the BBC website [Online] Cited 15/03/2009

    2/ Text from the Museum of Contemporary Photography website [Online] Cited 15/03/2009 (no longer available)


    Many thankx to the Australian Centre for Photography for allowing me to publish the Darzacq photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image. All other images are used under “fair use” for the purpose of education, research and critical discourse.

       

       

      Denis Darzacq (French, b. 1961) 'Hyper #8' 2007 from the exhibition 'Hyper' by Denis Darzacq at Australian Centre for Photography (ACP), Sydney, March - April, 2009

       

      Denis Darzacq (French, b. 1961)
      Hyper #8
      2007

       

      “The astonishing photographs that make up Hyper involve no digital manipulation, just close collaboration between young dancers and sportspeople as they jump for the camera to form strange, exaggerated poses and body gestures. Denis Darzacq was drawn to the trashy, consumerist nature of the French Hypermarkets (the equivalent of our supermarkets) and the hyper coloured backgrounds they provided. These supermarkets offered a sharp juxtaposition to the sublime, almost-spiritual bodies that appear to float in their aisles.

      Hyper is the latest series of works by French photographer Denis Darzacq, who continues to explore the place of the individual in society, a theme which has been crucial to his work in the last few years.”

      Text from the ACP website [Online] Cited 15/03/2009. No longer available online

       

      Jacques Henri Lartigue (French, 1894-1986) 'L'envol de Bichonnade' 1905

       

      Jacques Henri Lartigue (French, 1894-1986)
      Bichonnade, 40, Rue Cortambert, Paris
      1905
      Gelatin silver print

       

      Jacques Henri Lartigue (French, 1894-1986) 'Mr Folletete (Plitt) et Tupy, Paris, March 1912' 1912

       

      Jacques Henri Lartigue (French, 1894-1986)
      Mr Folletete (Plitt) et Tupy, Paris, March 1912
      1912
      Gelatin silver print

       

      Jacques Henri Lartigue (French, 1894-1986) 'Fuborg' 1929

       

      Jacques Henri Lartigue (French, 1894-1986)
      Fuborg
      1929
      Gelatin silver print

       

      Herni Cartier-Bresson (French, 1908-2004) 'Behind Saint Lazare Station, Paris, France' 1932

       

      Herni Cartier-Bresson (French, 1908-2004)
      Behind Saint Lazare Station, Paris, France
      1932
      Gelatin silver print

       

      Aaron Siskind (American, 1903-1991) 'Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation #37' 1954

       

      Aaron Siskind (American, 1903-1991)
      Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation #37
      1956
      Gelatin silver print

       

      Aaron Siskind (American, 1903-1991) 'Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation #47' 1954

       

      Aaron Siskind (American, 1903-1991)
      Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation #47
      1954
      Gelatin silver print

       

      Aaron Siskind (American, 1903-1991) 'Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation #93' 1961

       

      Aaron Siskind (American, 1903-1991)
      Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation #93
      1961
      Gelatin silver print

       

      Aaron Siskind (American, 1903-1991) 'Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation #99' 1953

       

      Aaron Siskind (American, 1903-1991)
      Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation #99
      1956
      Gelatin silver print

       

      Aaron Siskind (American, 1903-1991) 'Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation #491' 1954

       

      Aaron Siskind (American, 1903-1991)
      Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation #491
      1956
      Gelatin silver print

       

      Denis Darzacq (French, b. 1961) 'Hyper #3' 2007

       

      Denis Darzacq (French, b. 1961)
      Hyper #3
      2007

       

      Hyper picks up on La Chute while explicitly focusing the artist’s message on the consumerism which hovered in the background of several previous series. In Casques de Thouars Darzacq explored the connecting power and the limits of a consumer product; here the critique is more biting. Hyper opposes bodies in movement and the saturated, standardised space of mass distribution outlets. In this totally commercial setting, the body’s leap expresses the freedom and unhampered choice of its movement. It is a clear challenge to the marketing strategies which seek to control our behaviour. Some of the figures, glowing with an aura, impose glory and give off a sense of spirituality in total contrast with the temples of consumption in which they are found.

      “Hyper 1, 2007-2010,” on the Denis Darzacq website Nd [Online] Cited 13/06/2022

       

      Denis Darzacq (French, b. 1961) 'Hyper #14' 2007

       

      Denis Darzacq (French, b. 1961)
      Hyper #14
      2007

       

       

      Australian Centre for Photography

      This gallery has now closed

      Denis Darzacq website

      Denis Darzacq Hyper images

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      Exhibition: ‘Overpainted Photographs’ by Gerhard Richter at Centre de la Photographie, Geneva

      Exhibition dates: 20th February – 12th April, 2009

       

      Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932) '9.4.89' from the exhibition 'Overpainted Photographs' by Gerhard Richter at Centre de la Photographie, Geneva, Feb - April, 2009

       

      Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932)
      9.4.89
      10.1 x 14.8cm
      Oil on colour photograph

       

       

      There is something unsettling in Richter’s serendipitious interventions. Using his own prosaic 10 x 15cm colour photographs that have been commercially printed as the basis of the works, Richter overlays the surface of the photograph with skeins of paint that disturb the reflexivity of each medium. Dragging the photograph through the paint or using a palette knife to apply layers of colour, the surfaces of paint and photograph no longer exist as separate entities. The process produces punctum like clefts rent in the fabric of time and space. If the intervention is judged unsuccessful the result if immediately destroyed.

      In 5.Juli.1994 (below) blood red fingers of paint strain upwards as they invade the solidity of a dour suburban home, echoing the invading trees branches at top right of picture. In 11.2.98 (below) green paint slashes across the mouth and forehead of a woman in a floral dress, her eyes seemingly bloodshot and pleading stare into the distance to the left of our view, the silent scream strangled in her throat by the vibrations of paint. These are the instantaneous responses of the artist to the photograph, a single mood expounded in irreversible gestures, the actions of the painter’s hand disturbing the indexical link of the photograph and it’s ability to be ‘read’ as a referent of the object it depicts. Richter’s interventions challenge the concept of momentary awareness and offer the possibility of a space between, where the image stands for something else – access to Other, even a contemplation of the sublime.

      “The colour of paint applied corresponds or contrasts the tonalities of the underlying photograph but link the two through formal relationships of the layers … Often a tense relationship, the results run the gamut of the surreal to the beautiful to the disturbed. It is all the more surprising that each in its perceived completeness was in essence accomplished by chance and trial and error.”1

      “Richter’s painterly gestures bounce off the [photographs] content in peculiar ways, sometimes interacting with it, sometimes overlaying it and sometimes threatening to eclipse it altogether. The final effect is to cause both photography and painting to seem like incredibly bizarre activities, disparate in texture but often complicit in aspiration.”2

      I love the violence, the sometimes subversive, sometimes transcendental ‘equivalence’ of these images: where a Steiglitz cloud can stand for music, where a Minor White infrared photograph posits a new reality, Richter offers us an immediacy that destroys the self-reflexive nature of everyday life. His spontaneous musings, his amorphous worlds, his bleeds and blends crack open the skin of our existential life on earth. Here, certainly, are ‘the clefts in words, the words as flesh’.

      Dr Marcus Bunyan

       

      1/ “Gerhard Richter: Overpainted Photographs,” on the 5B4 blog, February 9, 2009 [Online] Cited 13/06/2022

      2/ Hatje Cantz. “Gerhard Richter: Overpainted Photographs,” on the Artbook website Nd [Online] Cited 13/06/2022

         

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932) '11.4.89' from the exhibition 'Overpainted Photographs' by Gerhard Richter at Centre de la Photographie, Geneva, Feb - April, 2009

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932)
        11.4.89
        10 x 15cm
        Oil on colour photograph

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932) '11.3.89'

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932)
        11.3.89
        10 x 14.9cm
        Oil on colour photograph

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932) '5.Juli.1994'

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932)
        5.Juli.1994
        10.2 x 15.2cm
        Oil on colour photograph

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932) '11.2.98'

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932)
        11.2.98
        10 x 14.7cm
        Oil on colour photograph

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932) '22.2.96'

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932)
        22.2.96
        9.6 x 14.7cm
        Oil on colour photograph

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932) '11.Febr.05'

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932)
        11.Febr.05
        10.1 x 14.9cm
        Oil on colour photograph

         

         

        The exhibition presents 330 of Richter’s largely unknown overpainted photographs, a technique he has been using since 1982.

        The exhibition UERBERNALTE FOTOGRAFIEN / PHOTOGRAPHIES PEINTES (OVERPAINTED PHOTOGRAPHS) at the Centre de la photographie Geneva (CPG) presented a side of the work of Gerhard Richter largely unknown up till now. Only a few collectors and gallerists close to the artist were aware of the practise that Gerhard Richter, one of the most important artists of our times, had developed systematically since 1982. It is only because of this exhibition that more than 1000 of his over-painted photographs will enter into his catalogue raisone. The CPG presents approximately 330 of them in this show.

        “By placing paint on photographs, with all their random and involuntary expressiveness, Gerhard Richter reinforces the unique aspect of each of these mediums and opens a field of tension rich in paradoxes, as old as the couple – painting / photography – which has largely defined modern art.”

        Text from Centre de la Photographie website

         

        Gerhard Richter is justly famed for the photorealism of his early canvases, but it is less well known that he has also painted directly onto photographic prints. These (mostly small-format) pieces were reproduced in books as early as the first Atlas, but practically all of the works themselves are housed in private collections and rarely exhibited in public. Overpainted Photographs gathers this body of work, which unites the labor of the hand with the work of mechanical reproduction to produce a kind of art as conceptually rich as Richter’s better-known paintings, neutralizing the expressive powers of each medium to reach an indifference to their potency. In an overture to Duchamp’s “degree zero” found objects, the original photographs are frequently bland in content – an empty office, a ball, a beach scene or tourist snapshot – and Richter’s painterly gestures bounce off that content in peculiar ways, sometimes interacting with it, sometimes overlaying it and sometimes threatening to eclipse it altogether. The final effect is to cause both photography and painting to seem like incredibly bizarre activities, disparate in texture but often complicit in aspiration. This monograph offers a unique opportunity to savour what had previously been a neglected but copious aspect of Richter’s work.

        Text from the Amazon website

         

        “The public scenes, whether on the beach or the ski slope or children’s theatre, are beset with sudden surges of colour that tend to resemble interventions of the sky or elemental forces, more than the moods of a decorative or ornamental painter annotation. Sometimes they seem like catastrophic visions. Blood-red snowflakes dance above the white fern. The photo shows skyscrapers in the urban morning sun – and the oil paint adds to the sulpherous fire that pours over the city from the sky”

        Botho Strauss in Gerhard Richter: Overpainted Photographs (Hardcover)

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932) '22.1.2000 (Firenze)'

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932)
        22.1.2000 (Firenze)
        12 x 12cm
        Oil on colour photograph

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932) '21.1.2000 (Firenze)'

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932)
        21.1.2000 (Firenze)
        12 x 12cm
        Oil on colour photograph

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932) '22.4.07'

         

        Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932)
        22.4.07
        12.6 cm x 16.7 cm
        Oil on colour photograph

         

         

        Centre de la Photographie
        28, rue des Bains,
        CH – 1205 GenĆØve
        Phone: + 41 22 329 28 35

        Opening hours:
        Tuesday to Sunday 11.00 – 18.00

        Centre de la Photographie website

        Gerhard Richter website

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        Exhibition: ‘Walker Evans and the Picture Postcard’ at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

        Exhibition dates: 3rd February – 25th May 2009

         

        Unknown Artist. 'Front Street, Looking North, Morgan City, LA' 1929 from the exhibition 'Walker Evans and the Picture Postcard' at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Feb - March, 2009

         

        Unknown artist (American)
        Front Street, Looking North, Morgan City, LA
        1929
        Postcard, Photomechanical reproduction
        3 1/2 x 5 1/2 in. (8.9 x 14 cm)
        The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Walker Evans Archive, 1994

         

         

        This looks a very interesting exhibition – I wish I could see the actual thing!


        Many thankx to TheĀ Metropolitan Museum of Art for allowing me to publish the photographs and art work in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

         

         

        This exhibition will focus on a collection of 9,000 picture postcards amassed and classified by the American photographer Walker Evans (1903-1975), now part of the Metropolitan’s Walker Evans Archive. The picture postcard represented a powerful strain of indigenous American realism that directly influenced Evans’s artistic development. The dynamic installation of hundreds of American postcards drawn from Evans’s collection will reveal the symbiotic relationship between Evans’s own art and his interest in the style of the postcard. This will also be demonstrated with a selection of about a dozen of his own photographs printed in 1936 on postcard format photographic paper.

        Text from The Metropolitan Museum of Art website

         

        Walker Evans (American, 1903-1975) 'Street Scene, Morgan City, Louisiana' 1935 from the exhibition 'Walker Evans and the Picture Postcard' at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Feb - March, 2009

         

        Walker Evans (American, 1903-1975)
        Street Scene, Morgan City, Louisiana
        1935
        Film negative
        8 x 10 in. (20.3 x 25.4cm)
        The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Walker Evans Archive, 1994

         

        “Sold in five-and-dime stores in every small town in America, postcards satisfied the country’s need for human connection in the age of the railroad and Model T when, for the first time, many Americans regularly found themselves traveling far from home. At age twelve, Walker Evans began to collect and classify his cards. What appealed to the nascent photographer were the cards’ vernacular subjects, the simple, unvarnished, “artless” quality of the pictures, and the generic, uninflected, mostly frontal style that he later would borrow for his own work with the camera. Both the picture postcard and Evans’s photographs seem equally authorless – quiet documents that record the scene with an economy of means and with simple respect. Walker Evans and the Picture Postcard proposes that the picture postcard represented a powerful strain of indigenous American realism that directly influenced Evans’s artistic development.”

        Text from the Steidl website

         

        The American postcard came of age around 1907, when postal deregulations allowed correspondence to be written on the address side of the card. By 1914, the craze for picture postcards had proved an enormous boon for local photographers, as their black-and-white pictures of small-town main streets, local hotels and new public buildings were transformed into handsomely coloured photolithographic postcards that were reproduced in great bulk and sold in five-and-dime stores in every small town in America. Postcards met the nation’s need for communication in the age of the railroad and Model T, when, for the first time, many Americans often found themselves traveling far from home. In the Walker Evans Archive at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, there is a collection of 9,000 such postcards amassed by the great American photographer, who began his remarkable collection at the age of 10. What appealed to Evans, even as a boy, were the vernacular subjects, the unvarnished, “artless” quality of the pictures and the generic, uninflected, mostly frontal style that he later would borrow for his own work. The picture postcard and Evans’ photographs seem equally authorless, appearing as quiet documents that record a scene with both economy of means and simple respect. This volume demonstrates that the picture postcard articulated a powerful strain of indigenous American realism that directly influenced Evans’ artistic development.

        Text from the Amazon website

         

        Unknown artist (American) 'Main Street, Showing Confederate Monument, Lenoir, N. C.,' 1930s

         

        Unknown artist (American)
        Main Street, Showing Confederate Monument, Lenoir, N. C.
        1930s
        Postcard, Photomechanical reproduction
        3 1/2 x 5 1/2 in. (8.9 x 14cm)
        The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Walker Evans Archive, 1994

         

        Walker Evans was the progenitor of the documentary style in American photography, and he argued that picture postcard captured a part of America that was not recorded in any other medium. In the early 20th century, picture postcards, sold in five-and-dime stores across America, depicted small towns and cities with realism and hometown pride – whether the subject was a local monument, a depot, or a coal mine.

        Evans wrote of his collection: “The very essence of American daily city and town life got itself recorded quite inadvertently on the penny picture postcards of the early 20th century .… Those honest direct little pictures have a quality today that is more than mere social history .… The picture postcard is folk document.”

        Walker Evans and the Picture Postcard is the first exhibition to focus primarily on works drawn from The Walker Evans Archive. The installation is designed to convey the incredible range of his collection and to reflect the eclectic and obsessional ways in which the artist organised his picture postcards. For example, Evans methodically classified his collection into dozens of subject categories, such as “American Architecture,” “Factories,” “Automobiles,” “Street Scenes,” “Summer Hotels,” “Lighthouses,” “Outdoor Pleasures,” “Madness,” and “Curiosities”.

        Marty Weil. “Walker Evans’ Picture Postcard Collection on the ephemera: exploring the world of old paper website Feb 24, 2009 [Online] Cited 12/06/2022. No longer available online

         

        Unknown artist (American) 'Tennessee Coal, Iron, & R. R. Co.'s Steel Mills, Ensley, Ala.,' 1920s

         

        Unknown artist (American)
        Tennessee Coal, Iron, & R. R. Co.’s Steel Mills, Ensley, Ala.
        1920s
        Postcard, Photomechanical reproduction
        3 1/2 x 5 1/2 in. (8.9 x 14cm)
        The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Walker Evans Archive, 1994

         

        Walker Evans (American, 1903-1975) 'View of Easton, Pennsylvania' 1935

         

        Walker Evans (American, 1903-1975)
        View of Easton, Pennsylvania
        1935
        Postcard format gelatin silver print

         

        Walker Evans (American, 1903-1975) 'View of Ossining, New York' 1930-1931

         

        Walker Evans (American, 1903-1975)
        View of Ossining, New York
        1930-1931
        Gelatin silver print
        4 1/8 x 7 13/16 in. (10.5 x 19.8cm)
        The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Purchase, The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation Gift through Joyce and Robert Menschel, 1999

         

        Unknown artist (American) 'Holland Vehicular Tunnel, New York City' 1920s

         

        Unknown artist (American)
        Holland Vehicular Tunnel, New York City
        1920s
        Postcard, Photomechanical reproduction
        3 9/16 x 5 1/2 in. (9 x 14cm)
        The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Walker Evans Archive, 1994

         

        Unknown artist (American) 'Santa Fe station and yards, San Bernardino, California' c. 1910

         

        Unknown artist (American)
        Santa Fe station and yards, San Bernardino, California
        c. 1910
        Postcard, Photomechanical reproduction
        3 9/16 x 5 1/2 in. (9 x 14cm)
        The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Walker Evans Archive, 1994

         

        Unknown artist (American) 'Men's Bathing Department, Bath House, Hot Springs National Park, Ark.' 1920s

         

        Unknown artist (American)
        Men’s Bathing Department, Bath House, Hot Springs National Park, Ark.
        1920s
        Postcard, Photomechanical reproduction
        3 9/16 x 5 1/2 in. (9 x 14cm)
        The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Walker Evans Archive, 1994

         

        Walker Evans and the Picture Postcard

         

        Walker Evans and the Picture Postcard

         

        In 1903, the year Walker Evans was born, the US Postal service handled 700 million picture postcards. Evans would later recall his fondness for those “honest, direct, little pictures that once flooded the mail.” By the age of twelve he was a collector and through his lifetime, an obsessive. “Yes, I was a postcard collector at an early age. Every time my family would take me around for what they thought was my education, to show me the country in a touring car, to go to Illinois, to Massachusetts, I would rush into Woolworth’s and buy all the postcards.” For Evans, the addition of hand-colouring added a great deal of aesthetic value. …

        Walker Evans and the Picture Postcard reproduces hundreds of cards from his collection including the three magazine features mentioned above. Also the fine addition of an “illustrated transcript” of his now famous Lyric Documentary lecture at Yale in 1964 makes this a bit more interesting than the title may suggest. …

        Later in life Evans had friends around the country while on photo trips keeping an eye for postcards that might interest. He had a particular love for ones produced by the Detroit Publishing Company which were considered the “Cadillac” of postcards. Lee Friedlander related the following from a recent interview: “The Detroit Publishing Company had a formula. If a town had 2,000 people or so, it got a main street postcard; if it had 3,500, it got the main street and also a courthouse square. Walker liked the formula. He had everyone looking for this or that. He told me once in Old Lyme, “If you run across any ‘Detroits,’ get them for me.” I found sixty or seventy cards for him. He loved them.”

        “Walker Evans and the Picture Postcard by Jeff L. Rosenheim,” on the 5B4: Photography and Books blog, March 1, 2009 [Online] Cited 12/06/2022

         

        Walker Evans (American, 1903-1975) 'Stable, Natchez, Mississippi' March 1935

         

        Walker Evans (American, 1903-1975)
        Stable, Natchez, Mississippi
        March 1935
        Gelatin silver print
        10 x 8 in. (25.4 x 20.3cm)
        The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Gilman Collection, Purchase, The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation Gift through Joyce and Robert Menschel, 2005

         

        Unknown artist (American) 'Future New York, The City of Skyscrapers' 1910s

         

        Unknown artist (American)
        Future New York, The City of Skyscrapers
        1910s
        Postcard, Photomechanical reproduction
        3 9/16 x 5 1/2 in. (9 x 14cm)
        The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Walker Evans Archive, 1994

         

        Unknown artist (American) 'Woolworth and Municipal Buildings from Brooklyn Bridge, New York' 1910s

         

        Unknown artist (American)
        Woolworth and Municipal Buildings from Brooklyn Bridge, New York
        1910s
        Postcard, Photomechanical reproduction
        3 9/16 x 5 1/2 in. (9 x 14cm)
        The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Walker Evans Archive, 1994

         

        Unknown artist (American) 'Curve at Brooklyn Terminal, Brooklyn Bridge, New York' 1907

         

        Unknown artist (American)
        Curve at Brooklyn Terminal, Brooklyn Bridge, New York
        1907
        Postcard, Photomechanical reproduction
        3 9/16 x 5 1/2 in. (9 x 14cm)
        The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Walker Evans Archive, 1994

         

        Unknown artist (American) 'Empire State Building, New York' 1930s

         

        Unknown artist (American)
        Empire State Building, New York
        1930s
        Postcard, Photomechanical reproduction
        3 9/16 x 5 1/2 in. (9 x 14cm)
        The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Walker Evans Archive, 1994

         

         

        The Metropolitan Museum of Art
        1000 Fifth Avenue at 82nd Street
        New York, New York 10028-0198
        Phone: 212-535-7710

        Opening hours:
        Sunday – Tuesday and Thursday: 10am – 5pm
        Friday and Saturday: 10am – 9pm
        Closed Wednesday

        Walker Evans and the Picture Postcard (Hardcover)
        by Jeff Rossenheim and Walker Evans

        The Metropolitan Museum of Art website

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        Exhibition: ‘Looking In: Robert Frank’s The Americans’ at The National Gallery of Art, Washington

        Exhibition dates: National Gallery of Art, January 18 – April 26, 2009; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, May 16 – August 23, 2009; Metropolitan Museum of Art, September 22 – December 27, 2009

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'The Americans' New York: Grove Press 1959 front cover from the exhibition Exhibition: 'Looking In: Robert Frank's The Americans' at The National Gallery of Art, Washington, Jan - April, 2009

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'The Americans' New York: Grove Press 1959 back cover from the exhibition Exhibition: 'Looking In: Robert Frank's The Americans' at The National Gallery of Art, Washington, Jan - April, 2009

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans
        New York: Grove Press
        1959

         

         

        One of the seminal photography books of the twentieth century, Robert Frank’s The Americans changed photography forever, changed how America saw itself and became a cult classic. Like Eugene Atget’s positioning of the camera in an earlier generation Frank’s use of camera position is unique; his grainy and contrasty images add to his outsider vision of a bleak America; his sequencing of the images, like the cadences of the greatest music, masterful. One of the easiest things for an artist to do is to create one memorable image, perhaps even a group of 4 or 5 images that ‘hang’ together – but to create a narrative of 83 images that radically alter the landscape of both photography and country is, undoubtedly, a magnificent achievement.

        The photographs in the posting appear by number order that they appear in the book.

        Dr Marcus Bunyan


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

         

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 1 'Parade - Hoboken, New Jersey' 1955

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 1
        Parade – Hoboken, New Jersey
        1955
        Gelatin silver print
        Image: 21.3 x 32.4cm (8 3/8 x 12 3/4 in.)
        Private collection, San Francisco
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

         

        Released at the height of the Cold War, The Americans was initially reviled, even decried as anti-American. Yet during the 1960s, many of the issues that Frank had addressed – racism, dissatisfaction with political leaders, skepticism about a rising consumer culture – erupted into the collective consciousness. The book came to be regarded as both prescient and revolutionary and soon was embraced with a cult-like following.

        First published in France in 1958 and in the United States in 1959, Robert Frank’s The Americans is widely celebrated as the most important photography book since World War II. Including 83 photographs made largely in 1955 and 1956 while Frank (1924-2019) travelled around the United States, the book looked beneath the surface of American life to reveal a profound sense of alienation, angst, and loneliness. With these prophetic photographs, Frank redefined the icons of America, noting that cars, jukeboxes, gas stations, diners, and even the road itself were telling symbols of contemporary life. Frank’s style – seemingly loose, casual compositions, with often rough, blurred, out-of-focus foregrounds and tilted horizons – was just as controversial and influential as his subject matter. The exhibition celebrates the 50th anniversary of the book’s publication by presenting all 83 photographs from The Americans in the order established by the book, and by providing a detailed examination of the book’s roots in Frank’s earlier work, its construction, and its impact on his later art.

        Anonymous text from The National Gallery of Art website [Online] Cited 06/03/2009. No longer available online

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 2 'City fathers – Hoboken, New Jersey' 1955

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 2
        City fathers – Hoboken, New Jersey
        1955
        Gelatin silver print
        Image: 41.9 x 57.8cm (16 1/2 x 22 3/4 in.)
        Susan and Peter MacGill
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 3. 'Political Rally - Chicago' 1956

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 3
        Political Rally – Chicago
        1956
        Gelatin silver print
        Image and sheet: 57.8 x 39.4cm (22 3/4 x 15 1/2 in.)
        Susan and Peter MacGill
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 4 'Funeral, St. Helena, South Carolina' 1955-1956

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 4
        Funeral – St. Helena, South Carolina
        1955
        Gelatin silver print
        Image and sheet: 39.7 x 58.1cm (15 5/8 x 22 7/8 in.)
        Susan and Peter MacGill
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        “The photos revealed a bleaker, more dislocated view of America than Americans were used to (at least in photography). Frank’s “in-between moments” demonstrated that disequilibrium can seem more revealing, seeming to catch reality off-guard. In doing so the collection also announced to the world that photos with a completely objective reference / referent could be subjective, lyrical, reveal a state-of-mind. Looser framing, more forced or odd juxtapositions, “drive-by” photos and other elements offer a sense of the process that has produced the photos”

        Lloyd Spencer on Discussing The Americans in Hardcore Street Photography

        I couldn’t have put it better myself!

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 13 'Charleston, South Carolina' 1955

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 13
        Charleston, South Carolina
        1955
        Gelatin silver print
        Image: 41.3 x 59.1cm (16 1/4 x 23 1/4 in.)
        Susan and Peter MacGill
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 14 'Ranch Market, Hollywood' 1955-1956

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 14
        Ranch Market – Hollywood
        1956
        Gelatin silver print
        Image: 31.4 x 48.3cm (12 3/8 x 19 in.)
        Danielle and David Ganek
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 15 'Butte, Montana' 1956

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 15
        Butte, Montana
        1956
        Gelatin silver print
        Overall: 20 x 30.2cm (7 7/8 x 11 7/8 in.)
        The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Acquired through the generosity of the Young family in honour of Robert B. Menschel, 2003
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 18 'Trolley - New Orleans' 1955

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 18
        Trolley – New Orleans
        1955
        Gelatin silver print
        Image: 40.6 x 57.8cm (16 x 22 3/4 in.)
        Susan and Peter MacGill
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) Contact sheets for 'The Americans'

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        Contact sheets for The Americans
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        “Frank’s contact sheets take us back to the moment he made the photographs for The Americans. They show us what he saw as he traveled around The United States and how he responded to it. These sheets are not carefully crafted objects; in his eagerness to see what he had captured, Frank did not bother to order his film strips numerically or even to orientate them all in the same direction.”

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) Sequencing of 'The Americans' numbers 32-36

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        Sequencing of
        The Americans numbers 32-36
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        “Almost halfway through the book Frank created a sequence united by the visual repetition of the car and the suggestion of its movement.”

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 32 'U.S. 91, Leaving Blackfoot, Idaho' 1956

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 32
        U.S. 91, Leaving Blackfoot, Idaho
        1956
        Gelatin silver print
        Image: 28.9 x 42.2cm (11 3/8 x 16 5/8 in.)
        Collection of Barbara and Eugene Schwartz
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 33 'St. Petersburg, Florida' 1955

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 33
        St. Petersburg, Florida
        1955
        Gelatin silver print
        Sheet: 22.2 x 33.7cm (8 3/4 x 13 1/4 in.)
        Collection of Barbara and Eugene Schwartz
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 34 'Covered Car - Long Beach, California' 1956

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 34
        Covered Car – Long Beach, California
        1956
        Gelatin silver print
        Image: 21.4 x 32.7cm (8 7/16 x 12 7/8 in.)
        Lent by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gilman Collection, Purchase, Ann Tenenbaum and Thomas H. Lee Gift, 2005
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 35 'Car accident, US 66 between Winslow and Flagstaff, Arizona' 1955-1956

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 35
        Car accident, US 66 between Winslow and Flagstaff, Arizona
        1955-1956
        Gelatin silver print
        Image: 31 x 47.5cm (12 3/16 x 18 11/16 in.)
        Philadelphia Museum of Art, Promised gift of Susan and Peter MacGill in honour of Anne d’Harnoncourt
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 36 'U.S. 285, New Mexico' 1955

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 36
        U.S. 285, New Mexico
        1955
        Gelatin silver print
        Image: 33.7 x 21.9cm (13 1/4 x 8 5/8 in.)
        Mark Kelman, New York
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 37 'Bar, Detroit' 1955-1956

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 37
        Bar – Detroit
        1955
        Gelatin silver print
        Overall: 39.4 x 57.8cm (15 1/2 x 22 3/4 in.)
        Sherry and Alan Koppel
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

         

        The 50th anniversary of a groundbreaking publication will be celebrated in the nation’s capital with the exhibition Looking In: Robert Frank’s The Americans, premiering January 18 through April 26, 2009, in the National Gallery of Art’s West Building ground floor galleries. In 1955 and 1956, the Swiss-born American photographer Robert Frank (b. 1924) traveled across the United States to photograph, as he wrote, “the kind of civilisation born here and spreading elsewhere.” The result of his journey was The Americans, a book that looked beneath the surface of American life to reveal a culture on the brink of massive social upheaval and one that changed the course of 20th-century photography.

        First published in France in 1958 and in the United States in 1959, The Americans remains the single most important book of photographs published since World War II. The exhibition will examine both Frank’s process in creating the photographs and the book by presenting 150 photographs, including all of the images from The Americans, as well as 17 books, 15 manuscripts, and 28 contact sheets. In honour of the exhibition, Frank has created a film and participated in selecting and assembling three large collages. The exhibition will travel to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art from May 17 through August 23, 2009, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art from September 22 through December 27, 2009.

        The Americans is as powerful and provocative today as it was 50 years ago,” said Earl A. Powell III, director, National Gallery of Art. “We are immensely grateful to Robert Frank and his wife, June Leaf, for their enthusiastic participation and assistance in all aspects of this exhibition and its equally ambitious catalogue. We also wish to thank Robert Frank for his donation of archival material related to The Americans, in addition to gifts of his photographs and other exhibition prints to the National Gallery of Art in 1990, 1994, and 1996, all of which formed the foundation of the project.”

        Press release from the National Gallery of Art

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-Americans, 1924-2019) The Americans 44 'Elevator - Miami Beach' 1955

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-Americans, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 44
        Elevator – Miami Beach
        1955
        Gelatin silver print
        Image: 31.4 x 47.8cm (12 3/8 x 18 13/16 in.)
        Philadelphia Museum of Art, Purchased with funds contributed by Dorothy Norman, 1969
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 50 'Assembly line, Detroit' 1955-1956

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 50
        Assembly line – Detroit
        1955
        Gelatin silver print
        21.4 x 32.1cm (8 7/16 x 12 5/8 in.)
        The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Purchase, 1959
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 51 'Convention hall, Chicago' 1956

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 51
        Convention hall – Chicago
        1956
        Gelatin silver print
        Image: 22.5 x 34.1cm (8 7/8 x 13 7/16 in.)
        Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy, Andover, Museum Purchase
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 55 'Beaufort, South Carolina' 1955-1956

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 55
        Beaufort, South Carolina
        1955
        Gelatin silver print
        Image and sheet: 31.1 x 47.6cm (12 1/4 x 18 3/4 in.)
        Private collection
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 58 'Political rally – Chicago' 1956

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 58
        Political rally – Chicago
        1956
        Gelatin silver print
        Image: 59.1 x 36.5cm (23 1/4 x 14 3/8 in.)
        Betsy Karel
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 70 'Coffee shop, railway station – Indianapolis' 1956

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 70
        Coffee shop, railway station – Indianapolis
        1956
        Gelatin silver print
        Overall (image): 22.9 x 34.6cm (9 x 13 5/8 in.)
        The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Acquired through the generosity of Carol and David Appel, 2003
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss, 1924-2019) The Americans 71 'Chattanooga, Tennessee' 1955

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 71
        Chattanooga, Tennessee
        1955
        Gelatin silver print
        Image: 20.8 x 29.5cm (8 3/16 x 11 5/8 in.)
        Private collection
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        “It’s hard to stress how different The Americans was. Over the course of those 83 pictures – shot from Detroit to San Francisco to Chattanooga, Tennessee – Frank captured the country in images that were intentionally unglamorous. On a technical level, he brazenly tossed out an adherence to traditional ideas of composition, framing, focus, and exposure.”

        Sarah Greenough, Senior Curator of Photography at the National Gallery of Art in Washington

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 73 'Detroit - Belle Isle' 1955

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 73
        Belle Isle – Detroit
        1955
        Gelatin silver print
        Sheet: 29.2 x 42.5cm (11 1/2 x 16 3/4 in.)
        Collection of Barbara and Eugene Schwartz
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 81 'City Hall – Reno, Nevada' 1956

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 81
        City Hall – Reno, Nevada
        1956
        Gelatin silver print
        Image: 20.3 x 32.4cm (8 x 12 3/4 in.)
        Private collection
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) The Americans 83 'US 90 on route to Del Rio, Texas' 1955-1956

         

        Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
        The Americans 83
        U.S. 90, en route to Del Rio, Texas
        1955
        Gelatin silver print
        Image (and board): 47.6 x 31.1cm (18 3/4 x 12 1/4 in.)
        Private collection, courtesy Hamiltons Gallery, London
        Photograph Ā© Robert Frank, from The Americans

         

         

        National Gallery of Art
        National Mall between 3rd and 7th Streets
        Constitution Avenue NW, Washington

        Opening hours:
        Daily 10.00am – 5.00pm

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        Exhibition: ‘Reading the modern photography book: changing perceptions’ at the National Gallery of Art, Washington

        Exhibition dates: 18th January – 26th April, 2009

         

        Looks a great exhibition for fans of photography books!

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

         

        foto-auge (photo-eye), edited and with an introduction by Franz Roh, cover design by Jan Tschichold (Stuttgart: Akademischer Verlag, Dr. Fritz Wedekind & Co., 1929) from the exhibition 'Reading the modern photography book: changing perceptions' at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, Jan - April, 2009

         

        foto-auge (photo-eye)
        Edited and with an introduction by Franz Roh, cover design by Jan Tschichold
        (Stuttgart: Akademischer Verlag, Dr. Fritz Wedekind & Co., 1929)

         

        “Also produced in conjunction with Film und Foto, this book showcases a wide variety of photographic practices as a way of examining the social importance of the medium’s ability to construct visual knowledge.”

         

         

        Held in conjunction with Looking In: Robert Frank’s “The Americans,” this exhibition examines a variety of artistic and thematic approaches to the modern photography book, displaying examples that span the period from the late 1920s to the early 1970s. The photography book, more than simply a book containing photographs, is a publication composed by the careful sequencing and editing of photographic material. Often produced by a photographer, they present visual narratives through creative page design that frequently integrates photographs with text and graphic elements.

        This focus exhibition organises 21 books from the Gallery’s library into four themes: “New Visions,” “Documented Realities,” “Postwar Scenes,” and “Conceptual Practices.” It highlights diverse projects from individual photographers such as LĆ”szló Moholy-Nagy, Henri Cartier-Bresson, and Yasuhiro Ishimoto as well as collaborative projects from the Hungarian Work Circle (Munka Kƶr) and Andy Warhol’s Factory, revealing that the photography book is both a significant conveyer of contemporary experience and a witness to historical events.

        The modern photography book, more than simply a book containing photographs, is a publication composed by the careful sequencing and editing of photographic material. Often produced by a photographer, these books present visual narratives through creative page design that frequently integrates photographs with text and graphic elements. Popular across the political spectrum, photography books have been published both as art objects and as documentary records. Through their organisation they foster a critical examination of the visual world, and as works of historical witness they have helped to construct cultural memories. Photography books have been a primary format for the arrangement and display of photographs, making them a vital but commonly overlooked component of the history of photography. Today they continue to provide an important forum for photographers to convey their work to a wide public audience.

        Photographs have appeared in book format since their inception. For example, William Henry Fox Talbot’s commercially published The Pencil of Nature (1844) was one of the earliest explorations of photography’s narrative capabilities. Like all early photography books, Talbot’s photographs were printed separately from the letterpress text. It was not until the 1880s, with the development of the halftone plate and printing process, that mass-produced newspapers, magazines, and books regularly featured photographs. This invention, which allowed type and photographic images to be mechanically reproduced on the same press, dramatically changed the means by which the general public viewed and had access to photographs. By the 1920s the number of photographically illustrated publications had increased exponentially, and photographs regularly recounted events without explanatory text. As people began to see more and more photographs on a daily basis, they became far more visually literate. Set within this context, the modern mass-produced photography book challenged not only traditional narrative structures but also popular habits of reading and seeing.

        Text from the National Gallery of Art website [Online] Cited 06/03/2009. No longer available online

         

        Yasuhiro Ishimoto (Japanese-American, 1921-2012) 'Aruhi Arutokoro (Someday, Somewhere)' preface by Tsutomu Watanabe, design by Ryuuichi Yamashiro (Tokyo: Geibi Shuppan, 1958) from the exhibition 'Reading the modern photography book: changing perceptions' at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, Jan - April, 2009

         

        Yasuhiro Ishimoto (Japanese-American, 1921-2012)
        Aruhi Arutokoro (Someday, Somewhere)
        Preface by Tsutomu Watanabe, design by Ryuuichi Yamashiro (Tokyo: Geibi Shuppan, 1958)

         

        “This engaging publication juxtaposes photographs taken by Ishimoto in Chicago and Tokyo. Born in the United States, Ishimoto spent his childhood in Japan and later returned to the U.S. to attend school at the Institute of Design in Chicago. Finally settling in Tokyo, he influenced a new generation of postwar Japanese photographers interested in producing books.”

         

        Henri Cartier-Bresson (French, 1908-2004) 'The Decisive Moment' (New York: Simon & Schuster, in collaboration with Ɖditions Verve, Paris, 1952)

         

        Henri Cartier-Bresson (French, 1908-2004)
        The Decisive Moment
        (New York: Simon & Schuster, in collaboration with Ɖditions Verve, Paris, 1952)

         

        “An important presentation of Cartier-Bresson’s photographs from the 1930s and 1940s, this large-format book helped to popularise his work, in which a distinctive documentary approach transforms ordinary moments into remarkable photographic visions.”

         

         

        National Gallery of Art
        National Mall between 3rd and 7th Streets
        Constitution Avenue NW, Washington

        Opening hours:
        Daily 10.00am – 5.00pm

        National Gallery of Art website

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        Opening 3: Review: ‘Show Court 3’ and ‘Mood Bomb’ by Louise Paramor at Nellie Castan Gallery, Melbourne

        Exhibition dates: 5th March – 28th March, 2009

        Opening: Thursday 5th March, 2009

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964) 'Show Court 3 (II)' 2009

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964)
        Show Court 3 (II)
        2009

         

         

        Boarding a train at Flinders Street we emerge at South Yarra station to stroll down to River Street for our third opening of the night at Nellie Castan Gallery. We are greeted by the ever gracious Nellie Castan who has just returned from an overseas trip to Europe where she was soaking up the wonders of Rome amongst other places. For the latest exhibition in the gallery Louise Paramor is presenting two bodies of work: Show Court 3 and Mood Bomb (both 2009). Lets look at Show Court 3 first as this work has older origins.

        Originally exhibited in 2006 at Nellie Castan under the title Jam Session the sculptures from this exhibition and many more beside (75 in all) were then installed in 2007 on show court 3 at Melbourne & Olympic Parks, hence the title of the installation. In the smaller gallery in 2009 we have six Lambda photographic prints that are records of this installation plus a video of the installation and de-installation of the work.

        While interesting as documentary evidence of the installation these photographs are thrice removed from the actual sculptures – the sculptures themselves, the installation of the sculptures on court and then the photographs of the installation of the sculptures. The photographs lose something in this process – the presence or link back to the referentiality of the object itself. There is no tactile suggestiveness here, no fresh visual connections to be made with the materials, no human interaction. The intertextual nature of the objects, the jamming together of found pieces of bright plastic to make seductive anthropomorphic creatures that ‘play’ off of each other has been lost.

        What has been reinforced in the photographs is a phenomena that was observed in the actual installation.

        “The sculptures created a jarring visual disruption when placed in a location normally associated with play and movement. The stadium seating surrounding the tennis court incited an expectation of entertainment; a number of viewers sat looking at the sculptures, as though waiting for them to spin and jump around. But mostly, the exhibition reversed the usual role of visitors to place where one sits and watches others move; here the objects on the tennis court were static and the spectators moved around.” (2007)1

        In the photographs of these objects and in the installation itself what occurs is an inversion of perception, a concept noted by the urbanist Paul Virilio.2 Here the objects perceive us instead of us perceiving the object: they stare back with an oculocentric ‘suggestiveness’ which is advertising’s raison d’ĆŖtre (note the eye sculpture above). In particular this is what the photographs suggest – a high gloss surface, an advertising image that grabs our attention and forces us to look but is no longer a powerful image.

        In the main gallery was the most interesting work of the whole night – experiments of abstraction in colour “inspired by the very substance of paint itself.” Made by pouring paint onto glass and then exhibiting the smooth reverse side, these paintings are not so much about the texture of the surface (as is Dale Frank’s work below) but a more ephemeral thing: the dreamscapes of the mind that they promote in the viewer, the imaginative connections that ask the viewer to make. Simpler and perhaps more refined than Frank’s work (because of the smooth surface, the lack of the physicality of the layering technique? because of the pooling of amoebic shapes produced, not the varnish that accumulates and recedes?) paint oozes, bleeds, swirls, drips upwards and blooms with a sensuality of intense love. They are dream states that allow the viewer to create their own narrative with the title of the works offering gentle guides along the way: Girl with Flowers, Lovers, Mood Bomb, Emerald God, Mama, and Animal Dreaming to name just a few. To me they also had connotations of melted plastic, almost as if the sculptures of Show Court 3 had dissolved into the glassy surface of a transparent tennis court.

        These are wonderfully evocative paintings. I really enjoyed spending time with them.

        Dr Marcus Bunyan

         

        1/ O’Neill, Jane. Louise Paramor: Show Court 3. Melbourne: Nellie Castan Gallery, 2009

        2/ Virilio, Paul. The Vision Machine. (trans. Julie Rose). Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1994, pp. 62-63


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

         

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964) 'Show Court 3 (VI)' 2009

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964)
        Show Court 3 (VI)
        2009

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964) 'Show Court 3' 2009 (detail)

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964)
        Show Court 3 (detail)
        2009

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964) 'Show Court 3' 2009 (detail)

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964)
        Show Court 3 (detail)
        2009

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964) Opening night crowd in front of 'Sky Pilot' (left) and 'Mama' (right) 2009

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964)
        Opening night crowd in front of Sky Pilot (left) and Mama (right)
        2009
        Paint on glass

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964) Opening night crowd in front of 'Green Eyed Monster' (right) and 'Sky Pilot' (right) 2009

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964)
        Opening night crowd in front of Green Eyed Monster (right) and Sky Pilot (right)
        2009
        Paint on glass

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964) Opening night crowd in front of 'Pineapple Express' 2009

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964)
        Opening night crowd in front of Pineapple Express
        2009
        Paint on glass

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964) 'A Dog and His Master' 2009 (detail)

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964)
        A Dog and His Master (detail)
        2009
        Paint on glass

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964) 'Lovers' 2009

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964)
        Lovers
        2009
        Paint on glass

         

        Dale Frank (Australian, b. 1959) '2. One conversation gambit you hear these days: 'Do you rotate?' An interesting change of tack? No suck luck. 'Do you rotate?' simply fishes for information about the extent of your collection. Do you have enough paintings to hang a different one in your dining room every month?' 2005

         

        Dale Frank (Australian, b. 1959)
        2. One conversation gambit you hear these days: ‘Do you rotate?’ An interesting change of tack? No suck luck. ‘Do you rotate?’ simply fishes for information about the extent of your collection. Do you have enough paintings to hang a different one in your dining room every month?
        2005

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964) 'Mood Bomb' 2009

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964)
        Mood Bomb
        2009
        Paint on glass

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964) 'Slippery Slope' 2009 (detail)

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964)
        Slippery Slope (detail)
        2009
        Paint on glass

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964) 'Green Eyed Monster' 2009 (detail)

         

        Louise Paramor (Australian, b. 1964)
        Green Eyed Monster (detail)
        2009
        Paint on glass

         

         

        Nellie Castan Gallery, Melbourne

        This gallery closed in December 2013

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        Artist’s talk: Photographer Gregory Crewdson to present at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City

        12th March, 2009

         

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

         

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

         

        Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
        Untitled from the series Beneath the Roses
        2006
        Digital pigment print

         

         

        Famed photographer Gregory Crewdson will present the inaugural discussion in a series sponsored by the Photography Society of The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City…

        Crewdson’s work has been widely exhibited and reviewed. He makes large-scale photographs of elaborate and meticulously staged tableaux, which have been described as “micro-epics” that probe the dark corners of the psyche. Working in the manner of a film director, he leads a production crew, which includes a director of photography, special effects and lighting teams, casting director and actors. He typically makes several exposures that he later digitally combines to produce the final image.

        “Crewdson is one of the most daring and inventive contemporary artists using photography,” said Keith F. Davis, Curator of Photography at the Nelson-Atkins. “His meticulously crafted works are immensely rich in both narrative and psychological terms. They prod us to rethink our ‘usual’ relationship to photographs as physical objects and as records of worldly fact. Crewdson is a genuinely important figure in today’s art world. He has an international reputation and has influenced an entire generation of younger photographic artists.”

        Attendance to the program is free.

        Text from ArtDaily.org website

         

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

         

        Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
        Untitled from the series Beneath the Roses
        2005
        Digital pigment print

         

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

         

        Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
        Untitled from the series Beneath the Roses
        2005
        Digital pigment print

         

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

         

        Gregory Crewdson (American, b. 1962)
        Untitled (Sunday Roast)Ā from the series Beneath the Roses
        2005
        Digital pigment print

         

         

        Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
        4525 Oak Street
        Kansas City, MO 64111

        Opening hours:
        Thursday – Monday 10am – 5pm
        Closed Tuesday and Wednesday

        Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art website

        Gregory Crewdson on the Gagosian website

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        Exhibition: ‘BiografĆ­as’ by Ɠscar MuƱoz at Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney

        Exhibition dates: 19th February – 14th June, 2009

         

        Ɠscar MuƱozĀ (Colombian, b. 1951) 'BiografĆ­as' 2002 (installation view)

        Ɠscar MuƱozĀ (Colombian, b. 1951) 'BiografĆ­as' 2002 (installation view)

         

        Ɠscar MuƱoz (Colombian, b. 1951)
        BiografĆ­as (installation views)
        2002
        5 video projections, 7 ‘, loop, without sound, DVD, mdf support, metal grids, variable dimensions

         

         

        “How can one construe a notion of time in this immemorial setting? How can one assimilate and articulate in one’s memory all these events that have been happening for so many years now?”

        “My work today … is based on my endeavour to understand the mechanism developed by a society which has ultimately suffered the routinisation of war… A past, a present and in all likelihood a future full of violent events on a daily basis, which are stubbornly repeated, in a practically identical fashion.”


        Ɠscar MuƱoz

         

         

        Ɠscar MuƱoz is something of a gentle magician. His ‘disappearing’ drawings are poignant and beautiful, combining consummate skill with conceptual subtlety and rigour.

        MuƱoz is a senior Colombian artist. He plays an important role in mentoring younger artists but his own work is very focused on a personal language that is closely tied to the body and its disappearance. His work has always combined traditional drawing skills with video in a completely original and surprising way.

        Although MuƱoz is not assertively political, his work is more about mortality than specific acts of violence but it is impossible not to look at it in the context of Colombian life. A common technique for social control has become the ‘disappearing’ of people. The work shown in this exhibition, BiografĆ­as 2002 is structured to reflect this pervasive theme of disappearance.

        BiografĆ­as is one of a series of works in which portraits slowly disappear, reflecting the disappearance of people on a regular basis in Colombia. MuƱoz has made silk screen portraits of people but instead of forcing ink through the screen onto paper he has dusted fine coal dust through the screen onto a flat basin of water. The portrait in coal is then transferred to float on the surface of the water. After a while the water starts to drain out of a plug hole in the basin causing the image to begin to distort. Eventually the image is compressed becomes unrecognisable and finally disappears down the drain.

        Five such portraits are shown in BiografĆ­as by projecting video of the performed drawings onto screens on the floor complete with plug holes beneath which you hear the sound of water running down the drain.

        Text from the Art Gallery of New South Wales website [Online] Cited 22/02/2009 (no longer online)


        Many thankx to Art Gallery of New South Wales for allowing me to publish the art work in the posting. Please click on the art work for a larger version of the image.

         

         

        Ɠscar MuƱozĀ (Colombian, b. 1951) 'BiografĆ­as' 2002 (still)

        Ɠscar MuƱozĀ (Colombian, b. 1951) 'BiografĆ­as' 2002 (still)

        Ɠscar MuƱozĀ (Colombian, b. 1951) 'BiografĆ­as' 2002 (still)

         

        Ɠscar MuƱozĀ (Colombian, b. 1951)
        BiografĆ­asĀ (stills)
        2002
        5 video projections, 7 ‘, loop, without sound, DVD, mdf support, metal grids, variable dimensions

         

         

        Ɠscar MuƱoz BiografĆ­as

        The work refers to the idea of death, disappearance and transience of memory, linked to acts of violence.

        MuƱoz is also known for his use of ephemeral materials, in poetic reflections upon memory and mortality.

         

         

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