Photography

Cindy Sherman - Holding Up The Mirror by Geoff Harrison

Blogging about an artist as prolific and enduring as New York based Cindy Sherman is a challenge.  Where to start? Where to finish?  Listening to Sherman talking about her work doesn’t help a great deal.  She once claimed that she has no idea what her work is about until she reads a review of it. She works intuitively and it’s not always clear to her what she aims to achieve until she sees the final image.

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What is clear is that she is one of the most significant American artists of the last 40 years.  She just keeps going on, this portrayer of alienation, of oddity (with a twist of humour), of what it’s like to be a woman in contemporary America.  And her medium is photography where she is not only the photographer, but also the model.  She painted whilst at college but found the process too laborious, she wanted to spend more time focusing on the composition and then get an instant image.

Untitled#92, from Sherman’s Centrefold series, 1981

Untitled#92, from Sherman’s Centrefold series, 1981

In her studio there are drawers crammed with props including false teeth, noses, eyeballs, boobs, makeup, clothes, masks etc. which she uses to disguise herself to the point of being completely unrecognisable in some of her imagery.  As a child she enjoyed dressing up, but not to look like a stunning model or prima ballerina, but quite the opposite.  Her aims were rather perverse, looking older even decrepit and not wanting to be recognisable. Needless to say Sherman spends a lot of time in clothing stores, but not before deciding what character type she is buying for.

Cindy Sherman being interviewed in Art 21, 2009

Cindy Sherman being interviewed in Art 21, 2009

She rarely titles her photographs for 2 reasons.  Firstly she says she is not a wordsmith (which suggests she must have hated art school, if her experiences were like mine), but also because she doesn’t want anyone to approach her work with preconceived ideas of what the characters are meant to be.

It’s been argued that Sherman’s work anticipated the selfie era, but I’m not so sure of that, although it could be fairly argued that the selfie era has made her work more relevant than ever.  Yet the selfie culture is “it’s all about me”, and I see Sherman’s work as “it’s all about them”, or “it’s all about a certain character”.  A recent exhibition of her work in London was titled “Cindy Sherman – the Original Selfie Queen”, a marketing strategy perhaps?

Her oeuvre encompasses so many themes that to cover them all would require a novel, so I’m going to focus on just a few.

Untitled Film Still, 1978

Untitled Film Still, 1978

In her movie stills series she wanted to explore character studies that also tell a story.  She didn’t want to produce something that looked like “art” or based on art theory but something that looked mass produced, like a movie and preferably a European movie.  She has found more inspiration from movies than anything else.  But TV has also had an influence (especially trashy TV) given that, like me, she is from the first generation to be brought up during the TV era.

Untitled, 2004

Untitled, 2004

In her clown series, she wanted to explore the sense of unease a clown’s makeup can create, a questioning of what motivates someone to be a clown. 

Untitled #468, 2008

Untitled #468, 2008

But it’s her society portraits from around 2008 that I want to focus on.  She has received criticism for some of these portraits which include what she calls her Hollywood Hampton types for supposedly poking fun at them, as in “she’s come from the east coast and who does she think she is?”

Untitled #475, 2008

Untitled #475, 2008

In his review of this series, Paul Moorhouse sees these women confronting the issue of their age.  “Rather than attempting an air of youthful attractiveness, they are preoccupied with their own status and sophistication as the means of preserving personal and social credibility."  He makes reference to a neurosis, a chilling self-absorption which lies beneath “a mask-like veneer of charm”. Moorhouse also makes reference to the “frosty surface that is their solution to age” and an impression of “poignant frailty.” I particularly like the comment “these images are about the failure to deceive and the compulsion to do so”.

Untitled #477, 2008

Untitled #477, 2008

These portraits deal with the issue of the passage of time and how each individual must confront his/her own mortality, an issue that Sherman was by now also confronting.  She was born in 1954.

For some strange reason, whilst writing this blog I found myself watching a documentary on the wonderful British comedy actor Peter Sellers for the umpteenth time.  Sellers was famous for completely absorbing the characters he portrayed, and was regarded as a human chameleon who could transform himself into any role.  Many who knew him well spoke of an inner darkness or intense loneliness that haunted him, and that performing these roles may have provided an escape or sanctuary.  He once claimed to have no identity of his own.

Untitled #474, 2008

Untitled #474, 2008

Not that I’m suggesting that Sherman is the female equivalent of Sellers, after seeing her being interviewed a number of times over the years, she just seems like a very talented artist.  But she once said she wants to lose herself in the imagery and her figures to look like real people.  A 1994 BBC Arena program on Sherman is titled “Nobody is here but me” which says it all really.

Perhaps what we need is a male equivalent of Sherman, someone equally adept at portraying in the same dispassionate and probing manner various male character types.  Us guys need the mirror to be thrust in our faces.  If such an artist exists, please let me know.

At the end of an Art 21 documentary, we see Sherman leaving her exhibition at the Metro Pictures Gallery in New York on a pushbike.  She’s different.

References;

American PBS Art 21

Paul Moorhouse

BBC Arena







Reality In 21C by Geoff Harrison

A question came to my mind after leaving the exhibition “Civilization – The Way We Live Now” at NGV Australia.  What exactly constitutes living these days?  Author Sasha Grishin makes it plain how he felt about the exhibition “powerful, troubling photographs of a crowded planet with an uncertain future.” 

Sami and the Panguna mine 2009–10 (Bougainville), Taloi Havini & Stuart Miller

Sami and the Panguna mine 2009–10 (Bougainville), Taloi Havini & Stuart Miller

The show brings together over 100 contemporary photographers from Africa, Asia, the Americas, Europe and Australia with over 200 photographs. Some of the works are large in scale and all are thought provoking. There are very few images of people in rural settings, highlighting the fact that most of the world’s population now live in cities.

Desigual, Nathan Dvir, 2013

Desigual, Nathan Dvir, 2013

“For the first time, there is a real prospect that the human species stands to comprehensively annihilate itself, not through an act of war, but through man-made climate change and over consumption. It is also the first time that photographers are virtually everywhere and are photographing virtually everything.” GRISHIN

Brookes Brothers New York, WTC, Sept 12,2001, Sean Hemmerle

Brookes Brothers New York, WTC, Sept 12,2001, Sean Hemmerle

The exhibition is divided into 8 broad themes which, we are told, occupy many of the world’s photographers today.  There are images of military conflict, mass migration as a result of it and poignant scenes of the bedrooms of US servicemen who have died during the Iraq conflict.

Caribbean Princess 2015, from the Cruise Ships series 2014, Jeffrey Milstein

Caribbean Princess 2015, from the Cruise Ships series 2014, Jeffrey Milstein

“A hallmark of a memorable exhibition is that it seduces the viewer through its sheer beauty, while at the same time making us question the reality that we inhabit.”  An example of this is the theme Escape which, for some people, involves fleeing from a war zone while for others it involves the positive connotation of  ‘getting away from it all’ – hence the blossoming pleasure business.

Migrants walk past the temple as they are escorted by Slovenian riot police to the registration camp outside Dobova, Slovenia, Thursday October, 22, 2015, Sergey Ponomarev

Migrants walk past the temple as they are escorted by Slovenian riot police to the registration camp outside Dobova, Slovenia, Thursday October, 22, 2015, Sergey Ponomarev

One of the photographers featured in the exhibition, Nick Hannes, believes our civilization is reaching social and ecological limits.  His ambiguous and ironic imagery expresses his confusion and incomprehension with what’s going on.  He hopes to hold a mirror up to ourselves and create a moment of self-reflection.

f.D-2, KDK (this room really exists)

f.D-2, KDK (this room really exists)

The exhibition will run until February 2020 after which it will travel to Auckland.





Living With Art by Geoff Harrison

How are we supposed to appreciate art?  It may seem a dumb question, but art historians and critics tend to tie themselves into knots sometimes when answering it.  It is the belief of many commentators that society has got it wrong by focusing on the technical elements of a work of art, or its provenance or its historical context.

Sure, these issues are important, but what we are not encouraged to do is to connect up works of art with the trials and aspirations of our daily lives.  “It is quickly deemed vulgar, even repugnant, to seek personal solace, encouragement, enlightenment or hope from high culture” ALAIN De BOTTON. To put it simply, we are not encouraged to appreciate art as a means of instruction on how to live and die well.

The art historian Andrew Graham-Dixon remarked that the paintings of Howard Hodgkin were a rebuttal to the dry academic puritanism of much art criticism these days that can’t relate to a work of art until it’s been reduced to a set of abstract concepts.  I recall having an art teacher at RMIT who was embarrassed by the display of emotion in art.

Elliott Erwitt, His first wife and their child, New York, 1953

Elliott Erwitt, His first wife and their child, New York, 1953

Photographer Elliott Erwitt was born to Russian Jewish parents in Paris in 1928, and as the war clouds loomed, his family emigrated to America.  He felt being an émigré helped him in his job – being an outsider looking in.  He is regarded as a humanist and humourist.

Eve Arnold, Divorce In Moscow 1966

Eve Arnold, Divorce In Moscow 1966

Eve Arnold’s photograph could be considered a modern day version of those moralizing images that characterised Christian paintings of the past.  In a secular world and with considerable skill, Arnold brings us face to face with the consequences of letting ourselves and others down.

Jessica Todd Harper, The Agony In The Kitchen 2012

Jessica Todd Harper, The Agony In The Kitchen 2012

This photo was specifically commissioned for the book Art As Therapy, written by Alain De Botton and John Armstrong.  The rationale of this exercise is that art should start serving our psychological needs as effectively as it served theological and state needs for centuries.  We are asked here to consider what impact viewing this image might have on a couple whose own relationship is going through some difficulties.  They may realise that other people have the same sorrows and troubles as they have.  They may connect with something that is universal and unashamed.  They are not robbed of their dignity but are learning the deepest truths about being human.

Rogier Van Der Weyden, Descent From The Cross, circa 1438

Rogier Van Der Weyden, Descent From The Cross, circa 1438

Even in a secular world it is still possible to feel the emotion pouring out of this painting.  It transcends the perhaps narrow Christian context to touch the viewer in ways many other paintings of that era can’t.  It is a technical masterpiece for sure, but its psychological power goes far beyond.



Diane Arbus - Photographer of Oddity by Geoff Harrison

Ah, the exhibitions we just don't see in this country!  The Met in New York is staging an exhibition of the photography of Diane Arbus.

Born into a wealthy family, Arbus was fascinated by poverty and oddity.  “I love to go to people’s houses,” Diane Arbus once told a reporter, “exploring — doing daring things I’ve not done before.”   She was brilliant at school, sexually precocious and married young.  In the 1950's Arbus was shooting for a fashion magazine, a job she began to loathe - drawn as she was to the "flawed and unusual".

The Jewish Giant

The Jewish Giant

A biographer described Arbus as being adventurous, charismatic and always taking terrible risks.  Norman Mailer described giving Arbus a camera "was like putting a live grenade in the hands of a child.”

This image of identical twins so haunted Stanley Kubrick that he had to include something like it in his movie The Shining.

This image of identical twins so haunted Stanley Kubrick that he had to include something like it in his movie The Shining.

Some found her images ungainly, freakish even brutal but Arbus responded by saying these people wanted to have their photo taken - they liked being paid attention to.

Arbus had two daughters by her marriage, which ended in 1959.  In later years, ill health, loneliness and depression got the better of her, especially after her daughters left home. “My work doesn’t do it for me anymore,” she told a friend.  She committed suicide in 1971, aged 48.

Dealing With Asperger's by Geoff Harrison

A confronting exhibition is about to end at Latrobe Regional Gallery.  It's called Splinters Of The Minds Eye by Neale Stratford.  In this show, Stratford interprets the real world through the veil of Asperger's Syndrome with which he was diagnosed years ago.  

"I explore the gaps between internal and external realities, examine wanton desires and delusional thoughts within the context of everyday reality in the understanding of the paradox that is me."  Stratford's work puts me in mind of Bill Henson but with a powerful psychological twist.  References are made to anxiety, depression, introversion and autism that are part of his daily existence.  But at least Stratford has the ability to deal with his "disability" creatively.  I can't imagine what it must be like for those who can't.

 

 

When Less Is More And The Value Of Disappointment by Geoff Harrison

In an interview with "The American Reader", photographer Gregory Crewdson discusses his motivations and objectives.  His photos are often cinematic in scale and haunting - maybe even unnerving.  Crewdson has a very unique relationship with the figures in his work: "I don’t want to know them well. I don’t want to have any intimate contact with them. For all the talk of my pictures being narratives or that they’re about storytelling, there’s really very little actually happening in the pictures. One of the few things I always tell people in my pictures is that I want less—give me something less."  Thus his work is open to the widest interpretation, he is giving the viewer the opportunity to project their own narrative into the picture.

Later in the interview, Crewdson speaks of the inevitable disappointment of translating an image in his mind into the final product.  "Yes. I think that’s the nature of representation. No matter what it will disappoint, it will fail in some way.  But that’s also part of the magic of art. If every picture met my expectation in exactly the right way, there’d be no mystery; there’d be no gap between what’s in my head and the picture I make. So it’s necessary. But it sure disappoints you. It’s also what propels you to make the next one."

He argues this is the case for just about every visual or performing artist.  The desire to make something perfect, exactly right.

 

 

James Casebere by Geoff Harrison

The eerie imagery of the American photographer James Casebere.  In the 1990's Casebere constructed large models of buildings on a layout table and then inserted small light sources before photographing the results.  His work had quite an influence on me early in my career. There is an other worldliness to his work of this period which I admire.

Gregory Crewdson by Geoff Harrison

"These pictures are about creating a world.  I’ve always had these images inside my head that I want to get out into the world.  These towns are just a backdrop for a more submerged psychological drama.  It is really a projection from my own story where I have explored my own fears, anxieties and desires."   Gregory Crewdson

Crewdson was raised in New York City and his father was a psychoanalyst who practiced in the basement of the family home.  
What was going on there  was a complete mystery, Crewdson tried to eavesdrop on the sessions and hence the hidden psychology of his work.

Among other things he is credited with exploring lives of quiet desperation in towns abandoned by industry, although Crewdson denies there is a strong socioeconomic element to his work.