Lisson Gallery
London
27 & 52-54 Bell Street
+44 020 77242739 FAX +44 020 77247124
WEB
James Casebere and Graham Gussin
dal 10/11/2003 al 20/12/2003
44 020 77242739 FAX 44 020 77247124
WEB
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James Casebere
Graham Gussin



 
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10/11/2003

James Casebere and Graham Gussin

Lisson Gallery, London

James Casebere. Paradoxically emotional and austere, Casebere's work centres on the point where photography, architecture and sculpture intersect. Graham Gussin's new work deals with notions of the uncanny and the sublime, a recurring theme in much of his practice. Gussin uses film as material and reference and is interested in how filmic images and ideas spill out into reality and occupy space in our subconscious.


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James Casebere
52-54 Bell St.
12th November ­20th December 2003

"Casebere allows us to fill the empty space of his spatial stage which produces the effect of a primordially experienced landscape, at once close enough to be touched and distant enough for reflection." Anthony Vidler

Paradoxically emotional and austere, Casebere's work centres on the point where photography, architecture and sculpture intersect. Carefully constructing table-top models of interior spaces using plaster, Styrofoam and cardboard, he dramatically lights these miniature interiors or "sites" before photographing them and enlarging the prints using high spec Cibachromex{2039}a process usually associated with lush, glossy colour photography. The results are both surreal and remarkably realistic. Each model is specifically constructed to be seen through the lens of a camera and takes advantage of photography's ability to flatten space and capture lighting effects invisible to the eye. Though devoid of either plot or characters, his images of architectonic constructed spaces are nevertheless cinematic and poetic, at times imply a mute melancholic loneliness. Taken as a whole, this penetrating body of work, evokes an underlying anxiety about the loss versus the retention of things of value from traditional cultures, in our current global setting.

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Graham Gussin
29 Bell St.
12th November ­20th December 2003

Graham Gussin's new work deals with notions of the uncanny and the sublime, a recurring theme in much of his practice. Gussin uses film as material and reference and is interested in how filmic images and ideas spill out into reality and occupy space in our subconscious. In Dark Light Piece (Texas Chainsaw Massacre Mobile), 2003 he constructs a simple mobile, using incidental pastoral landscape stills from the seminal horror classic. The mobile itself becomes a literal play on suspension, floating above us like a cloud, its dark subject matter in stark contrast to its decorative form.
Spiral, 2003 is a continuous icy white neon spiral of words running one into the other that plays on the notion of perceived 'conditions' and psychological states. 'Unknown'; 'vague'; and 'unsure' are adjectives that trigger atavistic and familiar emotional responses and yet are also imply a state of non-existence. Doppelganger, 2003 investigates ideas of repetition and circularity whereby the artist attempts to see through the eyes of someone else. In 2001 Gussin advertised for a volunteer or 'doppelganger' to replicate exactly a trip made to Iceland in 2000. While Gussin was in London, his doppelganger was to experience, as closely as possible, events that had taken place a year before. The viewer too is intrinsic to the work and inevitably becomes the doppelganger as he or she follows the logic of the work. Again this embodies themes of the visible and invisible, becoming a complex visual trap.

Preview: Tuesday 11 November 2003, 6-8pm

Image: Graham Gussin, Doppelganger, 2003

Opening hours: Mon - Fri 10-6, Sat 11-5

Lisson Gallery, 29 & 52-54 Bell Street, London, NW1 5DA
T: 00 44 (0)20 7724 2739 F: 00 44 (0)20 7724 7124

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