Photofile: Contemporary Photomedia + Ideas, Issue
Transcription
Photofile: Contemporary Photomedia + Ideas, Issue
CONTEMPORARY PHOTOMEDIA + IDEAS 83 WINTER 2008 83 KRISTIAN BURFORD Aust $12.50 NZ $15 WINTER 2008 PF83_COVER.indd 1 BABELSWARM IN SECOND LIFE//VISCERAL VOYEUR: HELEN PYNOR //CHARLES GREEN & LYNDELL BROWN IN THE WAR ZONE LIPS & LASHES:PETA CLANCY//HARI HO’S WHITE CROSS BLACK LAND 6/3/08 6:03:28 PM 83 REGULARS 20 34 08 Editorial 10 Third Degree: The new director of the Monash Gallery of Art, Jason Smith, is brought in for questioning. 12 Previews: a critical appraisal of some of the upcoming events nationally and internationally 14 Debut: discover Joan Cameron-Smith’s Houses of Thought 16 Profile: The adventurous approach of the Queensland Centre for Photography 20 Interview: Charles Green & Lyndell Brown in the war zone. 60 Points of View: Four perspectives on Hari Ho’s White Cross Black Land 80 Rant: Darren Tofts gets cranky with the digerati FEATURES 26 BABELSWARM: Kirsten Rann goes into Second Life 56 Prizes, prizes, prizes: Martin Jolly investigates the plethora of photography prizes across Australia PORTFOLIOS 34 40 44 48 52 Lips & Lashes: Peta Clancy by Ashley Crawford The Presence of Absence: Ben Cauchi by Erika Wolf Visceral Voyeur: Helen Pynor by Ashley Crawford The Erotic Imagination: Kristian Burford by Jan Tumlir Behind the Masks: Jacqui Stockdale by Lesley Chow REVIEWS 26 65 Exhibitions: A Century in Focus: South Australian Photography 1840s-1940s at the Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide / Motion Pictures at the Perth Institute of Contemporary Art, Perth / Christian Marclay at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image, Melbourne / Paris Photo at the Carrousel du Louvre, Paris / Salvatore Panatteri; Untitled (to Dan Flavin) at H29, Brussels / Generation C at the Australian Centre for Photography, Sydney / Brisbane Sound at the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane 76 Books: Helen Ennis: Photography and Australia / Craig Golding Surf Club / Laurence Aberhart: Aberhart / Matt Hoyle: Encounters with the strange and unexplained 48 44 52 4 PHOTOFILE Peta Clancy, Lips 2, 2006 C-Type Print, 80x57cm. Courtesy the artist and thirtyseven degrees contemporary fine art gallery. Peta Clancy, Lashes 3, 2006 C-Type Print, 80x54cm. Courtesy the artist and thirtyseven degrees contemporary fine art gallery. CLANCY BY ASHLEY CRAWFORD L A S H E S + L I PS PETA IN DAVID CRONENBERG’S 1983 CLASSIC SCI-FI HORROR FLICK VIDEODROME WE ARE SENSUALLY ASSAULTED WITH DEBORAH HARRY’S CATHODE-RAY LIPS POUTING THROUGH A TELEVISION SCREEN. IT IS A DEEPLY DISTURBING IMAGE, AS THOUGH THE TELEVISION, HAVING CONSUMED HARRY, HAS COME TO LIFE IN GROTESQUE EXTENSION OF AN ADVERTISEMENT FOR REVLON LIPSTICK. In part, Cronenberg captures the obsession with surface that such marketing for lipsticks, powders, scrubs and creams engages – an alchemists dream for the veneer of the flesh. Such advertising is but one of the myriad sources Peta Clancy embraces in her work. “All the surfaces of the skin look so perfect in magazines!” she says. “We are a culture obsessed by youth and perfect surfaces of the skin. These surfaces are incredibly smooth and perfect! The images are very seductive, but so unreal.” 34 PHOTOFILE It is this balance between the real – the almost grotesquely cropped imagery focusing on the flesh – and the unreal – the tribalistic markings on that flesh – that make Clancy’s work such an uneasy balancing act between horror and beauty. The work has been informed by the ways the surfaces of the body can be perfected – “so that we are not reminded of the mutability, fragility of our bodies,” Clancy says. “The cosmetic industry is based on a particular aesthetic ideal. It offers ways to modify/cover up bodies that do not fit into this ideal.” More and more in the Western world men are also being targeted. But in reality this is hardly a new phenomenon. The history of scarification and tattooing has long been cross-gender and also clearly influences Clancy’s aesthetic. But rather than pursuing specific traditions, the patterning in Clancy’s photographs is based on the naturally occurring markings on the body – the lines, wrinkles or scars – specific to the body she is working on. “They tell a story of that particular body, based on their skin,” she says. “I also intend to refer to a sense of the psychological relationship to the markings on our skin, such as scars that become a part of us.” PHOTOFILE 35 36 PHOTOFILE PHOTOFILE 37 THE IS INTERNAL SUDDENLY EXTERNALISED AS LEFT Peta Clancy, Pierce, 2007 C-Type Print 80, x 78.5cm. Courtesy the artist and thirtyseven degrees contemporary fine art gallery. RIGHT Peta Clancy, Lips 1, 2007 C-Type Print, 80 x 51cm. Courtesy the artist and thirtyseven degrees contemporary fine art gallery. Peta Clancy, Crease3, 2007 C-type print, 80x53cm PREVIOUS SPREAD LEFT Peta Clancy, Crease 2, 2007 C-type print, 80x53cm DECORATION, In her most recent work Clancy has taken this concept several stages further. The highly decorative patterns on her eyelash works are based on anatomical diagrams of capillaries just beneath the skin – the internal is suddenly externalised as decoration, simultaneously raising the spectre of the fragility of human skin. Despite the beauty of the patterning, Clancy’s markings suggest an invasion of the surface of the body from within, as though the markings are generated by the body itself. In much the same way as a bird’s genetically coded plumage makes it attractive to a mate, Clancy’s humans have developed rapidfire genetic abilities to morph the surface, utilising internal body structures for aesthetic adornment. For all of the strange attractiveness of the end results, Clancy takes this notion of the internal further by quoting from Alberto Veca’s Vanitas The Symbolism of Time: “The skin represents the opaque and deceptive skin over the foul and shapeless mass of solid and liquid material that it encloses. The beauty of the body ends at the skin. If men could see what lies under the skin... they would shudder at the sight of women. All that grace consists of mucus and blood, humours and bile. If you think of what is hidden by the nostrils in the throat and stomach, you realize it is only filth.” PREVIOUS SPREAD RIGHT Peta Clancy, Eye 1, 2007 C-type print, 80x63cm 38 PHOTOFILE PHOTOFILE 39