SIMULACRA : ARCA LUMIS

Sator Arepo Tenet Opera Rotas

Sunday, December 2, 2007

ALYSON BELCHER’S CONTINUUM OF SECRETS

Alyson Belcher’s haunting photographs arise though planning and happenstance, utilizing the technological purity of the pinhole camera, which acts as an open shutter. Every nuanced movement is layered in a delicate black-and-white palimpsest (including seated or standing figures), yet these improvisational documents are infused with primal, if not mythological, textures. Belcher achieves this with her Spartan compositions, replete with neutral grey-black backgrounds and nubile youths who appear to have sprung from the temenos of antiquity. By limiting her palette to the pinhole camera, images in motion are diffuse and the subject’s features reside in perpetual chiaroscuro; this suggests these figures are ciphers, ghosts, or gods (or in the very least, inscrutable personas).

Ceding a percentage of the choreography to chance has been the metier of such artists as John Cage, Jackson Pollock, Boccioni, and Robert Altman, with alternately mixed and transcendent results. Chance operations often lead to more choices in the editing process, as there is a tendency for the work to move toward abstraction; however, the images that succeed from this process have a vitality unlike anything in the more stage-managed, static world. Belcher is searching for that elusive time-lapse trouvaille (”lucky find”) through assiduous looking and trial-and-error. Ironically, the first image on this page is not an overt action portrait, but that of a somber trio of women, staring impassively at us through the ether like a mythological trinity, vis a vis the Graiae, the Gorgons, or the Fates. Are the figures in black antipodal to the trio in white in picture six (who call to mind the Hesperides)? Religious and mythological archetypes pervade Belcher’s work, whether by design or sublimation, particularly those of Adam and Eve (pictures two, three, and five). Image four hints at the reenactment of some Christ-like story: Is the woman on the right acknowledging the stigmata on the other woman’s arm? Is the woman on the left being healed? Is she being admonished by the risen Christ (ala “Noli Me Tangere!”)? Going back to a classical analysis, image seven conjures the specter of Hades taking hold of a mortified Persephone; and image eight, the last of the larger thumbnails, references Orestes besieged by the Furies (and more particularly, Munch’s “Scream”). One could even perceive Hindu archetypes in the repititious silhouettes: a four-faced Brahma, the multifarious arms of Durga, and so on.

Belcher’s aesthetic “stems from the idea that everything we experience is stored somewhere in our bodies. Movement is one way to access and give visual form to what lies beneath the surface of the skin. Often the body remembers what the mind has forgotten.” Her figures are charged with these kinetic memories and recursive emotions, at once anticipating and releasing them, simultaneously turning away and moving toward one another (or the viewer). In the second image, the figure in profile could be turning away from the woman’s touch, or turning to acknowledge it. In the third image, the figures’ hands are either falling away or surreptitiously reaching behind to connect. What results is an emotional mystery, fueled by the ambiguity of suggested movement. The element of time creates a mutability in the form, as the alternating opacity and translucence defining the path of action leaves one final image, a meta-silhouette (one could hazard to call it the actual figure over time). There is also a mutability in the transference of energy: a fast motion equates to more transparent and variegated images, a slow motion guarantees more homogenous, opaque forms. Belcher has captured the duende of the dance through the invisible dynamism of overlapping timings (and therefore, the dualism of each participant). Here’s Belcher’s take on the technical aspects of her craft:

The pinhole camera is low tech; it is the most basic tool for making a photographic image. There is no lens to interfere with the light as it travels from the subject to the film. Because there is no viewfinder through which to preview the image, it’s a relatively blind process. The element of time in pinhole photography allows something to arise that might never be revealed by modern photographic technology. The long exposure times give me an opportunity to explore the space in front of the camera. I may have the impulse to move, or I may chose to remain still—although the body is never completely still, and even the smallest movements leave traces on the film.

 

05-25B (THUMB)
01-43C (THUMB)
02-75B (THUMB)
01-48D (THUMB)
01-3B (THUMB)
02-2B (THUMB)
05-23A (THUMB)
06-20A (THUMB)
0277-A06-23A06-35C05-26A05-24D03-8C04-34B05-10A02-85B
02-81A04-38D05-27B02-11B

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posted by Jazno at 11:07 pm  

Saturday, November 17, 2007

ANDIE FRANCOEUR SHOOTS IN A MINOR

[FULL DISCLOSURE: this artist is my lovely wife] Andie Francoeur is a local Seattle song artist who generally errs on the side of the minor keys; it is no surprise, then, that much of her photography falls into a similar tonal range. She brings the same spare intensity to her compositions and subject matter that she pours into her music, albeit with a less specific narrative. The high suicide rate in the Pacific Northwest notwhithstanding, our dreary weather drives artists inward ten months out of the year, figuratively and literally, which can be a creative boon; in Andie’s case, she has chosen to photo-document this process of spiritual hibernation without the attendant sentimentality, investigating the minutiae of our house and yard like David Lynch with his arthroscopic eye. Her interiors and landscapes are abstract paeans to emptiness, to dissipated energy, to the loss of family, to once visible worlds now rendered to ephemeral shells in Ephrata, Moses Lake, Vashon Island, and Seattle (on Minor Avenue, no doubt).

 

K. DOOR 3 (THUMB)
H. STAIRWELL 2 (THUMB)
I. HALLWAY (THUMB)
J. HALLWAY 2 (THUMB)
D. MIRROR (THUMB)
M. BACKLOT 2 (THUMB)
O. ELLIOT BAY 2 (THUMB)
V. SEATTLE RAIN 1 (THUMB)
X. SEATTLE RAIN 3 (THUMB)
W. SEATTLE RAIN 2 (THUMB)
1. LADIES AND GENTS (THUMB)
2. BAR (THUMB)
3. LAUNDROMAT (THUMB)
4. KJR (THUMB)
5. BERGAMONT BROOM (THUMB)
8. SELF-PORTRAIT (THUMB)
6. OIL LAMP & PUMPKIN7. LAMP AND PUMPKIN18. TWO CATS17. RUSSIAN DOLLS 110. VASHON ISLAND11. WATER TANK 112. GREENHOUSE 113. GREENHOUSE 2P. GREENHOUSE 3L. BACKLOTU. FLOWERSC. ROOMZ. SEATTLE RAIN 5Y. SEATTLE RAIN 4D. SHACKE. FIRE TRUCK
14. GREENHOUSE DOOR14. BEDROOM 216. RUSSIAN DOLLSJ. DOORWAYG. STAIRWELL 1CORNERS 1R. BATHROOM 1S. BATHROOM 2T. BEDROOM 5

 

EXPERIMENTAL PHOTOS
1. MOON SERIES 1 (THUMB)
2. MOON SERIES 2 (THUMB)
8. TWEEDLES 1 (THUMB)
9. TWEEDLES 2 (THUMB)
7. WABBIT (THUMB)
10. HEATLAMP SERIES 1 (THUMB)
11. HEATLAMP SERIES 2 (THUMB)3. MOON SERIES 34. MOON SERIES 4

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posted by Jazno at 1:15 am  

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

MOLLY LANDRETH’S AMERICAN GOTH CHICKS

[Fashionista and agent provocateur Kevin Parrish is our guest reviewer today]

Molly Landreth’s cogent style neither flaunts nor waters down today’s American queer and gender-transformed youth culture. Her photographs update the confrontational style of Diane Arbus by way of exact and historically contextualized content: queers today, alive, in love, at home, on the streets. Smacking at times of snapshots from pretty much anywhere in middle America, Landreth never employs the overtly composed mechanisms of a Robert Mapplethorpe or Cindy Sherman. While some images might drive us to smirk with their candy colored novelty (see “Ward”), it is the overall lack of queer-ness in Landreth’s work that is truly arresting. Each image is shot with sincere tenderness, and the affection and innocence conveyed by her subjects make each photograph remarkably contagious gifts. From her website:

Molly Landreth, 29, received her B.A. in Studio Art from Scripps College in Claremont, California in 2001 where she cultivated her love for photography, digital & feminist art and art history. In 2005 she received a M.F.A. in Photography and Related Media from the School of Visual Arts in New York City, where she began her current project, Embodiment. This project is a group of portraits that explores and aims to create a feeling of what it means to be queer today. She is currently living and working in Seattle, WA and exhibiting nationally. This project is being funded in part by a grant from the Humble Arts Foundation.

 

LINDSEY AND TINA (THUMB)
COLLEEN (THUMB)
MEG AND RENEE (THUMB)
RONNIE AND JO (THUMB)
CHARLIE AND HONEY
TRAVIS (THUMB)
JO AND JOANNE (THUMB)
CHICKADEE AND HER FAMILYDELWYNGINAJULIA AND TESSAMICHELLE AND JANICE

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posted by Jazno at 10:32 pm  
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