Attachments
New York City
The exhibition Attachments curated by Kathy Grayson and Tim Barber brings together a group of young artists who explore the depths and boundaries of the photographic medium. Widely varied in their practices, these artists add unique perspectives to their ever-expanding and mutating photographic dialog.
Using photography in new ways, especially across disciplines, each artist will present a group of works that overlap with what are traditionally the concerns of other media; whether that be cinema, the internet, publishing, sculpture, poetry, painting or curation.
Participating artists are:
Andrew Kuo is a multimedia artist who shows a series of iPhone photos where the color averaged areas to make pie charts in circles on top of the photograph.
Asger Carlsen / Interview on Wertical makes photographs that depict ruptures in reality with the insertion of illogical and highly surreal moments and distortions. He composes these images as you would a sculpture, shaping the figure into impossible poses, distorting limbs or adding faces where there definitely shouldn’t be.
Jason Nocito takes analogue photographs of the world around him that look digital, or manipulates digital photos to look analogue. His long history of making photographic publications informs his editing process and presentation.
Jessica Eaton makes photographs of things that don’t have a real-world indexical referent. One recent body of work Cubes for Albers and LeWitt explored what Josef Albers called “the discrepancy between physical fact and psychic effect” and bear a relationship to the history of abstract painting and Op Art.
Jim Mangan treats photography like a major movie shoot, taking a group of friends on a journey of self-exploration into foreign places to create his work. The Bedu series exhibited here were shot among the desolate sand dunes of Utah’s Little Sahara Desert where his subjects create new identities by obscuring their bodies with sand in a process of freedom and resurrection.
Kate Steciw makes digital photographic compositions where she deliberately misuses technology to make objects that are reminiscent of photographs but visually resemble sculptures or collages. The titles of her pieces add a layer of poetry to them that becomes apparent on subsequent examinations, finding hidden texts or objects distorted throughout her works, while the assortment of source images used highlight the randomness of digital image licenscing and bring up issues of ownership and exchange.
Peter Sutherland makes unique photographic objects by printing a photo and then adhering a perforated sticker with a different photo on to the front of it. The effect is like an analogue version of a digital photo overlay, and evocative of a hallucinatory vision of superimposed film made using a kind of cheap special effect that returns the photo to a certain objecthood.
Sandy Kim is a documentary photographer of the seedier side of life with her coterie of interesting looking and debaucherous friends in the tradition of Larry Clark or Nan Goldin, but updated through her blog and internet experiences.
October 20th – November 3rd, 2012
312 Bowery
New York City, NY 10012
USA
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