calendario eventi  :: 




2/4/2010

Time, Death & Beauty

Three venues, Omaha

The photography series "Shadows of Time" by Hans Pieler shows Architectural structures built for the purpose of telling the time or a specific date within a year; they reflected in their form the operations of the sky and astronomical systems. Photograpy is sometimes dealing with "Vanitas", Fulvio de Pellegrin did an astonishing series of mummies in Sicily in 1995 that he called "Homines". Beauty and transience, love and death. No other living thing appears more frequently in symbolism than the flower. "The Flower Show" brings together diverse approaches within contemporary floral photography. Three exhibitions, one project, curated by Matthias Harder.


comunicato stampa

Curated by Matthias Harder
who will give an introduction at all three venues

Hans Pieler - Shadows of TIME
Photo Series 1997 - 2007

Photography has a great affinity with time, it is said to capture a moment in time, to deliver "snippets of time" etc. This oft-sited closeness with time actually is more a description of the task the photographer to be at the right location at the right time, rather than the ability of this medium to photographically portray time.

It is not possible to actually depict time in still photographs. Rather eventually to visualize time by employing allegories such as a clock face. The photography series "Shadows of Time" shows many large "clocks" and "clock faces": Architectural structures built for the purpose of telling the time or a specific date within a year. At the right point in time the original function of these "large clocks" is visible.

At these so-called calendar structures, where ancient generations could determine through light/shadow positions, specific dates such as the summer solstice, or equinox, or even a particular hour of the day. Thus enabling the year to be structured as a calendar. To be "control of time" was also notably an important power factor.
Built with great astronomical knowledge, the structures and observatories operated as three-dimensional space/time installations. They reflected in their form the operations of the sky and astronomical systems. Even today observatories are built in certain forms following the requirements of their function.

The architecture becomes time and therefore a visual symbol of time. Through a photo capturing the two-dimensional reduction of this image, the symbol becomes clearly recognizable.

The archeological components are also reflected in the silver- based material of conventional photography. A special enlargement technology is used that enables the shadows and areas of depth to be emphasized. All parameters such as color, contrast and density are dependent on the (exposure) time. The exhibition prints are archival pigment inkjet prints on rag paper.

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DEATH - Fulvio de Pellegrin

Photograpy is sometimes dealing with "Vanitas". The Italian photographer Fulvio de Pellegrin did an astonishing series of mummies in Sicily in 1995 that he called "Homines". He used his 6x6 camera by then in the catacombs of Palermo and Savoca nearby Messina and enlarged the full neagtives. He selected nine photographs and developed and enlarged them in his dark room with "dirty" chemicals at different temperatures. With this trial-and-error process de Pellegrin got the individual tones and stains on the surface of the unique silver prints. The photographs could be 100 years old, regarding content and technique. Thus, Fulvio de Pellegrin plays with the time, the medium itself - and with our perception.

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BEAUTY - The Flower Show
A Gentle Force – Flowers in Contemporary Photography

Eliška Bartek – Wilfried Bauer – Jessica Backhaus – Amin El Dib – Stephan Erfurt – Hans Hansen – Gerhard Kassner – Sofia Koukoulioti – Christian Rothmann – Vera Mercer – Miron Schmückle – Margriet Smulders – Luzia Simons – Michael Wesely

Beauty and transience, love and death. No other living thing appears more frequently in symbolism than the flower. And in art history, the history of the flower picture is one of the most exciting and complex themes. This exhibition brings together for the first time diverse approaches within contemporary floral photography.

Vera Mercer has photographed flowers against neutral backdrops since 2005. Reducing their natural colorfulness with the aid of digital processing as a compositional moment, her final images are reminiscent of the tinted black and white photographs of Pictorialism. Mercer sometimes takes single flowers as her subject, such as a lone amaryllis standing erect in its axis. At other times the artist showcases couples, like a pair of white rose blossoms bending out over the vase’s edge with their weight.

In the early 1990s Wilfried Bauer realized a black and white series that is as tender as it is melancholic. In rural northern Germany the artist discovered a field of withered and dried sunflowers. Although they were merely intended for harvest and further processing in cattle feed, in Bauer’s photographic eye the flowers posed an ideal metaphor for death. In contrast to Bauer’s austere flower arrangements is the opulence of the still lifes by Dutch photographer Margriet Smulders. Often photographed at extreme perspectives to create illusive pictorial spaces, her images reference Flemish and Dutch baroque painting. In the 17th century Holland was the most important trade center for flowers – many of them precious – and its bourgeois affluence often found expression in the so- called “flower pieces.” Smulders doubles her blossoms and stems, branches and vines in water and glass surfaces, rendering them immemorial.

It is the rose in particular – which Smulders presents as striking and enigmatic – that stands for the dualism of love and death, for instance as the eternal bond between two lovers lasting well beyond their earthly existence. This is how we may see the roses that appear in the Venetian cemetery photographs by Gerhard Kassner, which take both a melancholic and distanced look at the allegorical tie between loving and suffering. That most of the flowers are or could be artificial underlines this dualism.

The lily is another flower associated with death, although for the cult of the Virgin Mary it also stands for purity and innocence. Here the lily is colorfully illuminated: Eliška Bartek experiments in her Swiss studio with different colored light upon white lilies that she then photographs at close distances. Bartek’s sophisticated use of light takes us on a sensual excursion into the realm of the lily and its possible meanings. Flowers’ colorful magnificence – be they natural, cultivated or, as here, contrived – is tempered by the fact that we humans, alone, are able to perceive color in nature.

We encounter a fusion of several motifs in the works of Michael Wesely, whose extreme time-lapse images make the process of floral deterioration manifest. Their reception demands more attention than usual, to decipher the fragments within the images. Here, we can observe how tulip stems lose their elasticity during an exposure time of several days’ length; a great deal of beauty may be found in the principle of transience. In the works of Amin El Dib on the other hand, a different aspect of decay confronts us. His black and white sequence reveals in full format the swollen stems of cut flowers coated in slimy vase water residue. Observing the gruesomely fascinating photographs, the dying flowers’ rotten odor – and the smell of death – virtually wafts into our nose. Vanitas has many faces; this one here is a grimace.

Image: Hans Pieler, from the series Shadows of Time, 1997-2007

PR Contact
Moving Gallery: Kim Carpenter +1-402 934-8059 kmncarpenter@gmail.com

Opening Receptions Saturday, April 3rd 2010 from 6 p.m.

Gallery 616
616 South 11th Street
April 3 - April 30
Hans Pieler - TIME

Garden of the Zodiac
Old Market Passageway
April 3 - May 26
Fulvio de Pellegrin - DEATH

Artists' Cooperative Gallery
405 South 11th Street
April 3 - May 26
BEAUTY - The Flower Show

IN ARCHIVIO [1]
Time, Death & Beauty
dal 2/4/2010 al 25/5/2010

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