The Innocents documents the stories of individuals who served time in prison for violent crimes they did not commit. At issue is the question of photography's function as a credible eyewitness and arbiter of justice.
The Innocents
Gagosian Gallery, Beverly HIlls is pleased to present The Innocents, a recent photographic project by the American artist Taryn Simon.
The Innocents documents the stories of individuals who served time in prison for violent crimes they did not commit. At issue is the question of photography's function as a credible eyewitness and arbiter of justice.
The primary cause of wrongful conviction is mistaken identification. A victim or eyewitness identifies a suspected perpetrator through law enforcement's use of photographs and lineups. This procedure relies on the assumption of precise visual memory. But, through exposure to composite sketches, mugshots, Polaroids, and lineups, eyewitness memory can change. In the history of these cases, photography offered the criminal justice system a tool that transformed innocent citizens into criminals. Photographs assisted officers in obtaining eyewitness identifications and aided prosecutors in securing convictions.
Simon photographed these men at sites that had particular significance to their illegitimate conviction: the scene of misidentification, the scene of arrest, the scene of the crime or the scene of the alibi. All of these locations hold contradictory meanings for the subjects. The scene of arrest marks the starting point of a reality based in fiction. The scene of the crime is at once arbitrary and crucial: this place, to which they have never been, changed their lives forever. In these photographs Simon confronts photography's ability to blur truth and fiction-an ambiguity that can have severe, even lethal consequences.
Taryn Simon lives and works in New York. The Innocents has been exhibited in 2003 at PS1 Contemporary Art Center, New York and at Kunstwerke, Berlin. Simon was awarded a John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship in Photography. The Innocents, Simon's first book, was published in the spring of 2003 by Umbrage Editions. Her photography and writing has been featured in numerous publications and broadcasts, including The New York Times Magazine, Vanity Fair, The New Yorker, Frontline, CNN and BBC.
Opening reception for the artist: Thursday, June 24th 6 – 8pm
Taryn Simon: The Innocents will be showing concurrently at Gagosian Gallery, London (Heddon Street).
For further information please contact the gallery or Philippe Brutus at pbrutus@artandcommerce.com.
Image:
LARRY YOUNGBLOOD
Alibi location, Tucson, Arizona
With Alice Laitner,
Youngblood's girlfriend and alibi witness at trial
Served 8 years of a 10.5-year sentence
for Kidnapping, Sexual Assault, and Child Molestation, 2002
Chromogenic print, 31 x 40 inches (78.7 x 101.6 cm) or 48 x 62 inches (121.9 x 157.5 cm), both ed. of 5
Gagosian
456 NORTH CAMDEN DRIVE
BEVERLY HILLS CA 90210