The exhibition presents a wide selection of her works, and through 86 photographs it tells us a story that changes subtly: from her initial interest in American popular culture in the 1970s to the spas, which are the subject of her images in the late 1990s and early 21st century.
Curator: Nuria Enguita Mayo
assisted by Rafael Barber
MAPFRE FOUNDATION is proud to present an exhibition of photographs by
Lynne Cohen, from February 19th to May 11th. This Canadian photographer
has produced one of the most interesting and consistent bodies of work on interior spaces in recent years.
Lynne Cohen (Racine, Wisconsin 1944) began her career in 1971 by taking black
and white photos of interior
spaces, from the outset the
artist aimed for direct, anonymous pictures that were as
neutral as possible. Throughout her career, her photos
have kept the basic elements that define her style. They give the impression of being anonymous and neutral,
some seem kind of threatening, but at the same time they are ironic and critical.
These features were taken to another level when she started to use colour.
In the 1970s Cohen started to focus on the psychological and sociological artifice of the burgeoning American middle class. She
took photos of domestic spaces,
living
rooms,
offices,
meeting
rooms, men’s clubs and beauty
salons. In the 1980s, Cohen went
a step further and took an interest
in the mechanisms to control and
manipulate society. She started to
focus on more authoritarian institutions such as laboratories, training centres,
classrooms and shooting ranges. In the 1990s Cohen introduced spas, and
from the year 2000, without changing her subject matter, she went on to take
colour photos.
Lynne Cohen photographs spaces as they are when she finds them – she does
not make any changes and even though these spaces really exist, it feels like
we are looking at something that is staged. The large scale of her photos invites
viewers to enter the picture, to examine it and to make their own interpretation
of it. There are no people in the photos: the artist says she wouldn’t know where
to place them; but even so, her photos are filled with a persistent human
presence.
Cohen works with an 8x10 inch
camera, which enables her to
have full control of the picture, in
order
to
create
a
crisp
composition and produce very
clear and sharp photos. She
uses flat lighting, symmetry and
distance between objects. She
also works with sensitive film,
long
exposure
and
a
small
aperture, giving the photographs
great field depth. Over the years her works have become monumental and
sculptural, an effect highlighted by the selection of frames made of various
materials and of different colours, which blend in with the textures of some of
the elements in the photos.
The exhibition presents a wide selection of Lynne Cohen’s works amalgamated
for the first time in Spain, and through 86 photographs it tells us a story that
changes subtly: from her initial interest in American popular culture in the
1970s, with domestic and public interior spaces, to training centres and social
engineering laboratories that the artist photographed in the 1980s and 1990s,
leading to the spas, which are the subject of her photos in the late 1990s and
early 21st century.
The exhibition narrative shows us
how the photographer has used the
same formal strategies from the start,
based on neutrality. Her photographs
are built upon symmetry, with a great
depth of field that does not make certain spaces or details more important
than others. This anonymity, this apparently neutral description – similar
to that of postcards or annual company reports– is precisely what makes
her photographs incredibly ironic and critical, which enables them to ‘speak for
themselves’.
The evolution of Lynne Cohen’s work, over the last forty years, is very subtle
and is identifiable by looking at the way in which she takes photographs. In
such, the viewer will be able to recognize a gradual evolution that goes from
black and white to colour, and from a
closer framing of objects to a more
distant one. In her photos we also
find a clear reference to a society
based on control and surveillance.
Her work becomes an essential testimony towards understanding the
current complexity of certain built
environments and architecture that
are often part of our everyday lives
controlling our habits and our relationships.
Cohen says her work lies somewhere between Jacques Tati and Michel Fou-
cault. The aim of this exhibition is to explore this movement: from an ironic criti-
cism of modernity to a lucid and committed approach to contemporary life
based on the full control of people’s bodies and their actions.
‘I’ve paid attention to formal strategies at least since 1971, when I
started taking photographs. Back
then I thought, as I still do now,
that by using formal resources in a
simple way I’d be able to deal with
complex topics, that they could be
introduced into onlookers in a subliminal way, rather than hitting
them with a sudden blow. More
specifically, it seems like the most
silent, sober and even anonymous
aspect of my photos could prove to be the most convincing. In fact, I found it
interesting that the simplest of ways to recover or document a part of the world
could offer the best chance for the quintessence of the subject to surface (assuming that there is one).’
The catalogue features all the works included in the exhibition, as well as contributions by Nuria Enguita Mayo, the exhibition curator, Jordi Costa and Antonella Pelizzari.
Image: Laboratory, c. 1999 © Lynne Cohen; courtesy of Olga
Korper Gallery, Toronto
Press contact
Alejandra Fernández Phone: 91 5818464; alejandra@fundacionmapfre.org
Press Conference: February 18th 2014 at 12.00 h
Opening: February 18th 2014 at 20.00 h
FUNDACIÓN MAPFRE Azca Exhibition Hall
Avenida Del General Perón 40 28020 Madrid
Hours:
mon 14.00 a 21.00
tue - sat 10.00 - 21.00
sun 12.00 - 20.00
Entrance free