david levinthal: baseball
Transcription
david levinthal: baseball
DAVID LEVINTHAL: BASEBALL AU G U ST 10 - N OVEMBER 18, 2005 PRO J E C TS AT CLIFFORD CHANCE For the seventh exhibition in the Projects at Clifford Chance series, we are pleased to present works from David Levinthal’s Baseball series, begun in 2003. In the 1970’s, Levinthal began photographing small objects, toys, and dioramas to create photographs that transform the familiar into uncanny and arresting images. Using sophisticated lighting and photographic techniques, Levinthal reveals the transformative power of photography and the drama, narratives, and social values embedded in the medium and in his miniature forms. Dinaburg Arts LLC Curator, Clifford Chance US LLP DAVID LEVINTHAL A RT I ST STATEMENT For more than thirty years I have arranged toy figures in studio-constructed situations that mimic representations of contemporary myths and American icons. Doing so, I have tried to elaborate an aesthetic of fabrication rather than realism. The large-scale color photographs that I generate with the 20x24 Polaroid Land Camera give my effigies a seductive grandeur: at the same time, I am careful to make visible the seams of simulation. Probing the nature of such pervasive imagery, as it has been transmitted, filtered, and blurred in films, television, books, and magazines, I nevertheless try to evoke the genuine emotions that any of us can attach to an entirely artificial world. The Baseball series is based on the icons of baseball history, players such as Mickey Mantle, Babe Ruth, Jackie Robinson, and Willie Mays as they have been portrayed and forever etched in our collective memories. Described in soft focus to blur the distinction between still life and action shot, the characters reveal themselves only through imagined movement, their faces and clear, broad gestures reiterating the essence of America's historic pastime. Clifford Chance US LLP 31 West 52nd Street New York, NY 10019 Dinaburg Arts LLC www.dinaburgarts.com (212) 807-0832 David Levinthal appears courtesy of Paul Morris Gallery Graphic design by Abby Walton