re-title.com
  5 February 2009

re-title.com newsletter - Photography, Film & Video 

GALERIE STEFAN RÖPKE, Cologne
Galerie Thomas Schulte, Berlin
Aeroplastics Contemporary, Brussels
Galerie Loevenbruck, Paris
 
 
GALERIE STEFAN RÖPKE, Cologne
 
 
Edward Burtynsky, Silver Lake Operations #1, Lake Lefroy, Australia, 2007
 

Edward Burtynsky
Australia

 
30 Jan 2009 to 13 Mar 2009

Galerie Stefan Roepke presents the Canadian photographer Edward Burtynsky's second solo exhibition in Germany with selected works from the Australia series. Burtynsky's large scale colour photographs document the many facets of nature as they are transformed by human industry. Industrial processes such as gold- and silvermining are presented as highly expressive visions where beauty is found in the most unlikely of places.

The images by Burtynsky (born 1955 in St. Catharines, Ontario) are metaphors of the dilemma of our modern existence. We are drawn by the desire for prosperity and a good comfortable life, yet we all know that the world suffers to meet those demands. Our dependence on nature to provide us with the materials for our consumption, in contrast to our concern for the health of our planet, sets us into the uneasy contradiction that feeds the dialogue in Burtynsky's images between attraction and repulsion, seduction and fear. This contradiction is absolutely intended, as the artist insists that he is not celebrating nor condemning anything; neither industrialization nor the impact of civilization on the environment. Edward Burtynsky shows exceptional talent with his constant attention to composition and light, always presenting images with a painter's eye for colour and a sculptor's feel of form.

Burtynsky's photographs are included in the collections of numerous major museums around the world, including the Museum of Modern Art and the Guggenheim Museum in New York, the National Gallery of Canada, the Biblioteque National in Paris, and the Reina Sofia Museum in Madrid. Edward Burtynsky is established as one of Canada's most respected contemporary photographers. In June 2006, he was appointed to the Order of Canada, Canada's highest civilian honour, recognizing lifetime achievement.
 
 
Image:
Edward Burtynsky, Silver Lake Operations #1, Lake Lefroy, Australia, 2007
C-Print
39 x 49 inches, edition of 9
Courtesy of Galerie Stefan Röpke
 

GALERIE STEFAN RÖPKE
St. Apern-Strasse 17-21
Cologne 50667
Germany
+49 022125 55 59


 
 
 
Galerie Thomas Schulte, Berlin
 
 
Katharina Sieverding, Norad I, 1980, Digital Projection 
 
 
Katharina Sieverding
Projected Data Images

7 Feb 2009 to 7 Mar 2009

On Friday, February 6, 2009, Katharina Sieverding opens her fifth solo show at Galerie Thomas Schulte, entitled "Projected Data Images". We are pleased to be able to present this exhibition as an official contribution to the "Forum expanded" program of the 59th Berlinale. The artist will be present at the opening, which will be held from 6 to 9 pm.

Katharina Sieverding characterizes her works as "hybrid image surfaces and spaces on the border of truth and fiction, iconoclasm and the pictorial turn." Sieverding's work was almost from the very beginning virtually antipodal to the traditional definition of photography. In the process of creating her often monumental images, the artist took paths that were radical in technical, thematic, and formal terms, using a variety of techniques of reproduction and a large reservoir of images that the artist found or generated herself. She already developed her significant style in the late 1960s as a student of Joseph Beuys, when she began working with photographic techniques. Over the course of 40 years, Sieverding's work, with its central basic issue of "identity as individuality and collective individual," has unarguably always taken pioneering positions and exerted a great deal of influence on contemporary photographic art, anticipating and bringing about many developments.

In the exhibition "Projected Data Images" at Galerie Thomas Schulte, Katharina Sieverding consciously departs from her technique of showing her pictures as framed photographic works (usually large format C-prints). Instead, here she projects them directly onto the wall. This form of presentation was already her own in the early 1970s in connection with the strangely androgynous representations of the series Transformer, created by way of superimposition.

But now Sieverding creates her works using incomparably more complicated digital processes that allow her to superimpose image layers even more precisely onto one another and to work very precisely on the smallest details of her large pictures, almost like a sculptor. This leads to photographic image surfaces of a striking sophistication; their delicate structure creates a fascinating overall impact in terms of composition, even when seen at a close distance. The direct projection of the images onto the wall makes it possible to experience the details with their direct color depth, radiance, and corporeality in a spatial tension that is only familiar to us from the realm of cinematography.

Katharina Sieverding (born in Prague in 1944) lives and works in Düsseldorf und Berlin. She participated in her first documenta already in 1972, with the film Life-Death, also on view at this exhibition. In 1997, she represented Germany at the Venice Biennale, and in 2004 she was awarded the Kaiserring of Goslar. Her many exhibitions domestically and abroad include individual shows at Museum Folkwang, Essen, Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin, Kunstsammlung NRW, Düsseldorf, and Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam. In the US her works have been shown at Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, Dallas Museum of Art, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, and ICA, Boston. In 2004/05 New York's P.S.1 and Kunst-Werke Berlin presented an extensive survey of her work.
 
 
Image:
Katharina Sieverding
Norad I, 1980
Digital Projection
Size variable
© Katharina Sieverding, VG Bild-Kunst
© Klaus Mettig, VG Bild-Kunst
Courtesy: Galerie Thomas Schulte, Berlin


Galerie Thomas Schulte
Charlottenstraße 24
D-10117 Berlin
Germany
+49 (0) 30 2060 8990


 
 
 
AEROPLASTICS contemporary, Brussels
 
 
Shadi Ghadirian, Nil Nil #04, 2008 
 
 
Shadi Ghadirian
A woman photographer from Iran
 

13 Feb 2009 to 4 Apr 2009
 
AEROPLASTICS contemporary presents the first complete monographic exhibition of the Iranian photographer Shadi Ghadirian. Coming to wide public attention in 2001 with the series Qajar and Like Everyday, the artist has ever continued to explore the theme of conflict between tradition and modernity, and that of the position of women in a society dominated by male stereotypes. Showing just beneath the surface appears the whole saga of the relationship between Orient and Occident, set within a world context that sees Iran, pulled between the will to reform and conservative retrenchment, at times placed beyond the pale, at others considered as an unavoidably essential economic and political partner.

Represented at the Venice Biennale since the 1960s, Iran withdrew after the revolution, to then again take up its pavilion place in 2003.  Paradoxically, that year also saw the return of conservatives to power, after a period of reform that had sparked hope for a wider opening to the world, as well as an improvement of human rights and the status of women in the Islamic republic. The series Like Everyday (Domestic Life), which presents women entirely veiled, the face hidden behind assorted items of kitchenware, might appear an acerbic critique on the obligation to wear the veil.  But the artist warns against a too literal reading of these images, and underscores that the theme woman-object unfortunately has a universal dimension.  The series West by East plays with fashion codes to explore the same theme: in these portraits of women in Western dress, Shadi Ghadirian uses broad black hatching to cover those exposed parts of the body as well as coiffure, reminding us of the public prohibitions against exhibiting to view what one may banally see in the pages of magazines. The technique employed is simple and effective: the models are placed behind a glass pane upon which the artist intervenes - a method also used for the series Be Colourful. These investigations round a body at once hidden and revealed may be seen as far back as 1998, in the images comprising Out of Focus. As for her series Qajar, the title evokes the dynasty of the same name (1794-1925), under which portrait photography was introduced in Iran.  Veiled and dressed as in times of old, posing before 19th-century décors, women presenting objects like a radio, a mountain bike or a vacuum cleaner, like a bridge between two worlds, built upon the rather futile, though so-human, need to possess.  Further, the images that make up Ctrl+Alt+Delete subtly combine the gap between tradition and modernity with a query concerning the taboo surrounding the female body within Islamic society: positioned in front of a black background that she blends into, the model is at the same time revealed by the computer icons that go to delineate the form.

The new series White Square, Nil Nil and My Press Photos may seem an extension of these various themes, to which here the subject of war is added. For White Square, Shadi Ghadirian photographed (against a white, neutral background) objects of military use - helmet, canteen, ammunition belt, etc. - that she decorates with a little red silk ribbon.  Removed from their context, these accoutrements of war appear at once menacing and delicate, their aggressivity tempered by the feminine element. With Nil Nil, these same objects penetrate the domestic space (hand grenade in the fruit bowl, bloody bayonet as place-setting, gas mask in the kiddies' toy bag, etc.): the menace of conflict grafted onto peaceful everyday life, while in a way also becoming contained by the tranquillity of the familial location.  As for the collages that comprise My Press Photos, they combine images drawn from press-agency catalogues with old portraits of Iranian military men.  Across time and space, war's violence sadly reminds us of its universal, essentially male, dimension.  

Pierre-Yves Desaive
Critic and curator
Brussels , January 2009
 
 
Image:
Shadi Ghadirian
Nil Nil #04, 2008
colour photograph
Ed. of 10
76 x 76 cm
29.9 x 29.9 inches
Courtesy of Aeroplastics Contemporary


 
AEROPLASTICS contemporary
32 rue Blanche
1060 Brussels
Belgium
+32 2 537 22 02


 
 
 
Galerie Loevenbruck, Paris
 
 
Alain Declercq, Hidden Camera Obscura - Bayview Correctional Facility, 2008 
 
 
ALAIN DECLERCQ
HIDDEN
 
6 Feb 2009 to 7 Mar 2009
 
For his solo exhibition at the gallery, Alain Declercq is showing Hidden Camera Obscura, a new series of photographs taken in New York last year. He crisscrossed Manhattan getting these images of some 70 sites where photography, precisely, is prohibited. These prisons, police stations, tunnels and bridges have had their security status raised since 9/11, so in order to take his forbidden pictures, Declercq built his own lo-tech pinhole camera by making a tiny aperture in a plastic box. He would then cut a piece of film, place it in the box, place this on the ground facing the location, and let the light in to print the negative.

The resulting photographs are often hazy, imprecisely framed, sometimes inadequately lit because of the fluctuating exposure times - everything draws attention to the crudeness of the homemade method. And yet with this very simple tool Declercq made a breach in the law, methodically stealing that which is supposed to be hidden from the public gaze, yet exists at the heart of public space.

Alain Declercq is fascinated by all things more or less directly related to paranoiac logics of security, to the political manipulation of fear and its use of collective hysteria, and to any kind of conspiracy theory. His subjects are control apparatus and systems of repression, manipulation and disinformation. He does not try to find out who is behind it all or what their motives are; rather, he reveals the methods that can be used to twist reality and scramble communications. To do this, he therefore becomes a bit of a scrambler himself, but seemingly without intent. He is more an antihero1 than an agitator or charismatic activist. He works in the background, an "invisible player," as he himself describes his positive double, Mike, the eponymous hero of his post-9/11 docudrama which follows this purported secret agent between Cairo, Washington D.C., Paris and Amsterdam. Without explicit denunciation, Declercq uses the very tools wielded by those who are the object of his critique. The two chief methods seem to be infiltration and overexposure. In Welcome Home Boss (2001), he trained powerful spotlights on the homes of Montreal's ruling classes at night. At the Centre d'Art in Brétigny-sur-Orge (2000) he invited visitorsto use a police car, and in his video État de siège (2001) he secretly filmed soldiers, while in another piece he reproduced a cruise missile and plastered it with the insignia of American Airlines. In his interview with Pierre-Henri Bunel (2) he brought to light a highly detailed and iconoclastic analysis of the 9/11 attack on the Pentagon, an event that has become illegible because of over-exposure.

Declercq's targets are both the apparatus of violence and repression and ideological apparatus, and he approaches them by means of fiction. When the French criminal investigation department searched the artist's own flat in Bordeaux, fiction and reality began to mirror each other to disturbing effect. On the strength of the fake weapons, plane tickets and press cuttings that he had gathered for the shoot of Mike (2005), Declercq found himself talking to the anti-terrorist brigade about this mysterious figure.

In response to the condition of bodies and minds, the artist offers tools for expropriating a reality that has become dilated and incomprehensible. "What interests me is the possibility that a work of art can be activated by others. To sum up, I seek to offer the spectator tools that make them a potential user. For example, when I reply to letters using a computer programme to imitate the handwriting of the person who sent them (Faux en écriture, 1997- 2004), the work can be seen as a kind of manual." Neither agitation nor propaganda, Declercq's work chooses to proceed by deciphering and investigation. It reproduces and documents the tools of power in order to give us a grip on its workings.

Marie Cozette

1. One of Declercq's earliest photographs, dating from 1998, is a full-length self-portrait entitled Anti-héros. It shows the artist sporting two left arms.
2. This former French intelligence officer wrote chapter IV of Le Pentagate, a book by Thierry Meyssan which details the inconsistencies


Image:
Alain Declercq
Hidden Camera Obscura - Bayview Correctional Facility
Manhatton 20th Street, 2008
Color print after negative, camera obscura, 50 X 50 cm. Edition of 5
© Alain Declercq/Galerie Loevenbruck, Paris

 
Galerie Loevenbruck
40 rue de Seine,
2 rue de l Echaudé
F - 75006 Paris
France
+33 (0) 1 53 10 85 68



 
 
 
 
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