Galerie Bugdahn und Kaimer Press
A series of photographs taken at the Oatfield Sweet Factory at Letterkenny in County Donegal. Mixing and kneading and pouring and extruding and pressing and tempering and slicing and wrapping, flow together into a sort of candy-choreography. In summarising this sequence under the title 'Temperance', O'Brien suggests the search for balance and harmony, for a middle ground.
The remarkable series of photographs that Abigail O’Brien produced at the Oatfield Sweet Factory at Letterkenny in County Donegal can be read on many levels. The most prosaic interpretation would focus on the documentary nature of these works, which record the equipment and materials and processes involved in the making of traditional candies, but which also introduce us to the men and women who perform the necessary alchemy of sweet making. Mixing and kneading and pouring and extruding and pressing and tempering and slicing and wrapping, flow together into a sort of candy-choreography. Even outsiders can perceive the concentration, but also the rhythmic sureness and ease with which individual gestures are carried out. What transpires here is a kind of laying on of hands, and the workers, like the dwarfs in the film Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, have an air of witchcraft about them. But we do not just see employees going about the practiced routines of work. We see them in repose as well – as in ‘Breaktime’ or in ‘Time Out’, which conveys a sense of fundamental separation and weariness that seem to place the viewer in the role of voyeur. The men and women depicted here might be actors glimpsed backstage after a performance, their masks dropped.
In summarising this sequence under the title ‘Temperance’, O’Brien suggests the search for balance and harmony, for a middle ground. Aristotle saw temperance as the summit between two chasms – the chasms of intemperance and insensibility. The artist explores these extremes in the rituals and processes of the factory floor, but also reminds us as viewers that our hunger may be bigger than our stomachs. Hence, a state of balanced moderation may be possible only after swinging into extremes (‘Good Girl 1’ and ‘Good Girl 2’) or trespassing into excess (‘Fools Gold’). It is for this reason that O’Brien’s work vacillates between the peaks of movement and rest, of luxury and emptiness. One can also see this symbolised in the delicious, baroque folds of a sugar-mass collapsing into smooth flat forms.
In her application to become Photographer in Residence at the Oatfield Sweet Factory, Abigail O’Brien emphasized that she hoped to produce a work with “a relevance that will extend beyond the factory gates.” This greater relevance embraces socialpsychological and aesthetic aspects. The 70 Oatfield workers constitute a community that has evolved in relative isolation for the better part of a century. Only through interaction and cooperation can their goals be achieved, though each individual must be fully concentrated on his own particular task, as we see in ‘Undertaking’ or ‘Flay’. In such everyday and workaday gestures, O’Brien sees something ritualistic and even primal. In an earlier, deeply moving work entitled ‘Extreme Unction – From the Ophelia Room’, she focused on the theme of grief through photographs taken at the ‘Dead Letter Room’ of the Dublin Central Post Office and at the Dublin City Morgue. In ‘Martha’s Cloth – Confirmation’, she documented the weaving of cloth at the McNutt Tweed Factory in Downings, County Donegal. The looming process became a metaphor for the threads that make up an individual life, while the waft and weave of the cloth symbolised the reflective and the active aspects of everyday life.
Both projects became part of ‘The Seven Sacraments’, shown in Munich in 2004 and Dublin in 2005, which brought the artist her first international attention. That series, inspired by Nicolas Poussin’s work on the same theme, took nine years to complete, and now the artist has moved on to an exploration of ‘The Natural Virtues’, to which ‘Temperance’ contributes a new chapter. Yet both cycles employ similar techniques and metaphors, so that one can indeed see all of O’Brien’s oeuvre to date as a gigantic work in progress exploring the rituals and the dogmas of everyday life. Many of these relate to the preparation and consumption of food – as in her ‘Kitchen Pieces, Confession + Communion’ from 1998. Among the most formally beautiful and enigmatic works in this series is a group of eight still-lifes where a granite-topped kitchen cupboard becomes a household altar with fish and meat and poultry, bread and fruit and pastry arranged in what William Butler Yeats might have termed “a fearful symmetry.”
For ‘Dream Kitchen’, O’Brien used a streamlined Siematic Kitchen display as a set, gently satirising the culinary communion of mother and daughter. In formal as well as emotional contrast, a real kitchen provides the background for ‘Clara Baking’, whose Vermeer-like light places the image firmly within the tradition of women as portrayed in the closed spaces of Dutch genre painting. The extensive cluster of images and objects that make up the ‘Kitchen Pieces’ also includes five sculpted wooden bread-loaves, as well as a loaf broken into 30 pieces that are cast in bronze and then plated with silver. Like ‘Thirty Slices of Bread’, which the artist contributed to a show entitled ‘BreadMatters’ in 2007, the work alludes to the Last Supper and Judas’ betrayal of Christ. In the background one hears the voices of young children conjugating verbs that have to do with eating and drinking: “I eat / You eat / He eats / She eats / You eat / They have eaten”, followed by similar conjugations of taste, bite, chew, sip, savour, nibble, spit, rub, nibble, savour, sip and eat – like a kind of gastronomic litany.
This blending of voice, object and photograph is typical for O’Brien’s multi-medial approach. Rarely are her photographs shown autonomously but are moulded into environments and ensembles. The body of work entitled ‘Fortitude’, for example, introduces us to a mind-boggling private collection of tanks and other military vehicles, along with “The Collector” and his family. As the first instalment of the new series based on ‘The Natural Virtues’, the photographs were presented alongside a full-size blow-up replica of a tank, covered with a “camouflage” pattern of cross-stitched pink raspberries. ‘Temperance’ features 26 large Lambdachrome prints, as well as hard-candy casts of human organs, displayed on industrial trolleys. An accompanying video entitled ‘Good Housekeeping’ rounds out the ensemble. It shows a woman washing down the factory machinery at the end of the week: the ablutions after the excess, the middle ground between labour and repose. This multimedial, installational aspect of O’Brien’s work sets her apart from the “stars” of the international photography scene, who aim for an entirely reduced, sober and sometimes sobering presentation of oversized images.
O’Brien’s entire idiom effectively demonstrates how aspects of Christian ritual and belief are intertwined with everyday objects and activities in what might be termed rituals of the commonplace. In her recasting of ‘The Last Supper’ (1995) – the first work in the series ‘The Seven Sacraments’ - quotidian female rites are celebrated above a long, white-draped banquet table set for a single guest. In ‘How to Butterfly a Leg of Lamb’ (1999), which references Artemisia Gentileschi’s painting of ‘Judith Slaying Holofernes’ and was also realised with the artist Mary Kelly, the visual power of the culinary demonstration itself is underscoredand intensified by the elegantly folded red napkins that accompany the action. (O’Brien is fascinated by the use of the colour red in all its shades and hues in the poetry of Emily Dickinson, where it variously symbolizes life, vitality, erotic ecstasy, emotion and tension.) The folding of napkins and tablecloths, embroidery and sewing and needlepoint and flower-arranging number among the “female” skills celebrated in O’Brien’s work. She has even exhibited the backs of needlepoint designs in order to show the confusion and improvisation and clutter from which the completed harmonies derive. Such activities have prompted critics to draw comparisons to other women artists like Judy Chicago and Rosemary Trockel or Trace Emin and Annette Messager, who have creatively transformed such clichés of a woman’s world.
In the catalogue accompanying Abigail O’Brien’s exhibitions at Munich’s Haus der Kunst, the Kunstverein Lingen and Dublin’s Royal Hibernian Academy in 2004 / 2005, the Jesuit art critic Friedhelm Mennekes reflected in eloquent detail about the relationship between the ‘Seven Sacraments’ of Catholicism and the works of Abigail O’Brien. What this and other analyses sometimes overlook, however, is the humour that literally “graces” many of her photographs and objects – unmistakable in images like ‘Communion’ and ‘Dream Kitchen’, for example. It is also central to the installation O’Brien created in 1996 at the Dublin branch of Habitat, where a photo series entitled ‘Man Eating Cream Bun’ was first exhibited. O’Brien’s is a humour that in no sense diminishes the seriousness of the works in question but which ensconces them in a kind of comédie humaine. Never has the humour been so sprightly as in the series entitled Bella, which the artist completed in 2007. In each of the 14 images that comprise this wittily elegant series, a meringue is poised on a flourish of doily atop a long-stemmed silver dish that resembles a stiletto-heeled shoe. As in a fashion-shoot, the coquettish ‘Glamour Puss’ flourishes her petticoats and reveals the many facets of her sensuous but fragile self.
O’Brien’s saucy dame blanche has distinguished cousins in Andy Warhol’s delicious drawings of ice-cream sundaes, many of which were named for pop celebrities. Indeed, from his early ‘Campbell’s Soup’ paintings to his later entrepreneurial experimentwith the “Andymat,” Warhol’s work again and again addressed the theme of eating in America. Contemporaries like Roy Lichtenstein, Jim Dine, Robert Indiana and Wayne Thibaud made their own distinctive contributions to the theme, while Claes Oldenburg transformed his studio on New York’s lower East Side into the “Store,” where he sold hand-painted papier-mâché cakes and pies and ice-cream cones and joints of beef. Such works were particularly well suited to a generation determined to make popular culture an instrument for overturning the artistic dogmas of post-war New York, but artists’ interest in food as a subject is virtually timeless. One might cite the illusions of Dutch still-life painting, the fantasies of Giuseppe Arcimboldo and Édouard Manet’s scandalous ‘Déjeuner sur l’herbe’ as examples of the expressive range of the subject.
In the café scenes of Toulouse-Lautrec, Van Gogh’s ‘Potato Eaters’ or Chaim Soutine’s iconic sides of beef, food likewise proved a multi-faceted theme, but it has sometimes served as a medium, as well. Dieter Rot sculpted in chocolate, while fat was a favourite material for Joseph Beuys and Keith Haring once drew with spaghetti. In our own time, Brazilian artist Vik Muniz has created images with chocolate syrup, pepper, peanut butter and jelly – even with caviar. Since most of these unconventional compositions are used as photographic “models”, they come far closer to the aesthetic of Abigail O’Brien than to that of the Pop artists. It is no surprise, then, that the products of the Oatfield Confectionary Factory, as it was once known, have provided not only photographic themes but also the material from which the artist has formed sculptures. These glistening “body parts”, cast from medical models of human organs, might have been produced by the glass-craftsmen of Murano, but are in fact moulded from the molten sugar syrup used for hard candies. (Images like ‘Synovia’ and ‘Mesentery’ explicitly echo the techniques developed in Murano for the production of colourful pate de verre.)
In her examination of confectionary processes and pleasures, O’Brien moves into a sphere rich in legend and fantasy and wish fulfilment: into the storied sphere of Candyland. The dream of a land of plenty, where “the trees are made of peppermint sticks, and lemonade fills the streams” (as in the 1961 film Babes in Toyland), occurs in many variations. One of the oldest is the medieval-mythical land of Cockaigne - a word derived from the small sweet cake sold to children at street-fairs. (These are the true antecedents to the fragrant madeleines that prompt the flow of memory in Proust’s À la recherché du temps perdu.) The “sweets to the sweet” that Hamlet’s mother placed on the grave of Ophelia were actually small bouquets of flowers, but the metaphor itself suggests how precious sweets were at the time, when they were reserved for the nobility and the wealthy. By the 17th century, when sugar became plentiful in England, boiled-sugar candies like horehound drops and lemon drops and peppermint and wintergreen became popular favourites. In Tchaikovsky’s perennial ballet, The Nutcracker Suite, Clara and her prince find themselves with the Sugar Plum Fairy in the Land of Sweets with marzipan shepherds and Mother Ginger with her “Plichinelles”, the Bonbons, Taffy Clowns and Court Buffoons. Even when sweets became mass-manufactured staples of childhood, the dream of Candyland persisted. The Brothers Grimm had included it in their fairytales as a land of milk and honey called “Schlaraffenland”, whose wonders were passed along to generations of wide-eyed listeners. In Mother Goose we find the rhyme
Handy Spandy, Jack-a-dandy,
Loves plum cake and sugar candy.
During the Depression years in America, a popular hobo ballad described a child who dreamed of the “big rock candy mountain.” (At the same time, an attractive young woman came to be known as “eye candy.”) More recently, Roald Dahl’s Charlie and the Chocolate Factory lent the confectionary fantasies of childhood a modern twist, and the film version of 1971 gave us the enduring song “The Candy Man Can”. It added to a remarkable list of “sweet” songs and book titles, popular expressions and personalities like the vivacious “Sugar” as played by Marilyn Monroe in Billy Wilder’s Some Like It Hot. It also gave us Tennessee Williams’ Hard Candy and Terry Southern’s mildly pornographic Candy and the expression “easy as taking candy from a baby”. But the degree to which sweet dreams have infiltrated the collective consciousness is perhaps best summed up by the expression “happy as a kid ina candy shop”. Or as Abigail O’Brien in the Oatfield Sweet Factory, where she worked over a period of several months. Because of the varying intensities of light within the working space and the speed of workers’ movements, she employed a digital camera. The results can be appraised in the intensity and concentration of expressions often encountered here.
One immediately senses what attracted her to this project. As in so much of her work, she is recording the rhythmic, almost rituallike work of human hands, and once more the theme of nurture is present. (The first taste to develop in an infant is that for sweet substances, which are particularly high in life-sustaining carbohydrates.) The aesthetic dimension is often stunning in its intensity: the voluptuous layers of cooling toffee like folds in a Renaissance drapery; the shimmering, taffeta-like shades of yellow and pink and orange and turquoise; the gleaming cylinders of rock candy; the shiny black “loaves” of liquorice; and the knife plunging into a red “heart.” Added to this is the “patina” of the mysterious machines pictured here and the steam-shrouded figures on cleaning day, like Hephaestus’ dutiful helpers at the forge. These form the basis for ‘Good Housekeeping’, the accompanying video of looped stills with Oatfield’s “Health and Safety Regulations” providing the text.
There are surreal moments here, provoked by the anomalies of protective clothing that might equally well come from a research laboratory or an intensive-care unit or a canning plant. Workers are regularly provided with hairnets and gloves, safety shoes, ear defenders and safety glasses – even, where appropriate, with “moustache snoods”. The surreal atmosphere is intensified by signs that suddenly shout from the background: “Fire Exit”, “DANGER!” or “MOVING PARTS”. These read like slogans from an industrial age when “new-fangled” machines both lightened work and often made it more dangerous. It also echoes a time when family businesses like Oatfield consciously acted in loco parentis. Those insinuated levels of interpretation help to account for the richness of the environment Abigail O’Brien evokes here, where the pragmatic and the sensual interact in a sprightly play of colours and textures. The sensuous, fleshy folds of ‘Wrinkle 1’ and ‘Saponaceous’ and ‘Adipose’, furthermore, exist for only a few short minutes before the poured material falls in upon itself. This transitory moment is turned to delectable “eye candy” in the painterly photographs of Abigail O’Brien.
David Galloway
Abigail O’Brien (*1957) lives and works in Dublin. With ‘Temperance’, Galerie Bugdahn und Kaimer is presenting its sixth solo exhibition of works by Abigail O’Brien. The artists work is in many international private and public collections.
The Private View is on Friday, May 21, 2010, from 6 pm – 9 pm. Exhibition to July 10, 2010.
Galerie Bugdahn und Kaimer
Heinrich-Heine-Allee 19 - Dusseldorf
Gallery open Tuesday – Friday 12 noon – 6 pm; Saturday 12 noon – 4pm; and by appointment
Admission free