Jonathan Monk contributes a series of tongue-in-cheek photographs and two slide projections that play with the idea of falsified documents. Barbara Probst experiments with the temporality and point of view of the shot/counter-shot technique of film. Jules Spinatsch presents a selection of works from his major photographic project Temporary Discomfort.
Jonathan Monk, Barbara Probst, Jules Spinatsch
The Museum of Modern Art presents New Photography 2006: Jonathan Monk, Barbara
Probst, Jules Spinatsch, the latest installment of its annual fall showcase of
significant recent work in contemporary photography. The exhibition is organized by
Roxana Marcoci, Associate Curator, Department of Photography, The Museum of Modern
Art. Explains Ms. Marcoci, “Today’s photographic-based work holds a complex
genealogy-it is rooted in established photographic traditions, and is also an
outgrowth of the broader world of contemporary art. This year’s exhibition features
three artists from Europe whose varied approaches tap into film, video, and digital
technologies, attesting to the diversity of the medium.
The British artist Jonathan Monk offers a personal, humorous twist on the aesthetic
strategies of 1960s Conceptual art. The exhibition features Monk’s new work,
including the slide installation, I Do Not Know Where I Am, I Do Not Know Who I Am
With (2004), which is shown for the first time in New York. For this piece, Monk
asked his mother to review the contents of a box of slides his father had shot in
the late 1950s and 1960s and point out all those she could not identify. In the
installation the slides alternate between views of unidentified places and portraits
of people Monk’s father met before marrying his mother. Found photographs are a
source of inspiration in Monk’s work. This is evident in One in Fifty in One
(fishing boats) (2005), a series of 50 prints that takes Ilford photographic paper
as its material. The artist appropriated an image from the lid of the Ilford box,
and asked a commercial lab in Berlin to print the image on all of the 50 sheets of
paper conta
ined in the box.
German artist Barbara Probst’s photographic work consists of multiple images of a
single scene, shot simultaneously via a radio-controlled system of several cameras.
In Exposure #30: N.Y.C., 249 W 34 St. 11.20.04, 2:27 p.m. (2004) a woman is caught
in candid poses at the same instant in what appears to be four different locales: in
a park, beneath a skyscraper, looking into a giant eye, and standing on a floor that
is covered with letters. It is the same woman in four different circumstances at
the same moment, leaving one to guess how Probst managed to collapse space and time.
In actuality, Probst shot the piece in her studio, and the backdrops are enlarged
printouts of both her own photographs and popular film stills. The park is from
Michelangelo Antonioni’s film Blow-Up (1966); the skyscraper is a snapshot that
Probst took from the Empire State Building; the eye comes from Stanley Kubrick’s
film 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968); and the letters on the floor spell out an ex
cerpt from a poem by the postwar author Paul Ce'lan. By experimenting with the
point of view of the shot/counter-shot technique that film uses to tell a story, the
artist offers new interpretations of the traditional idea that photography can
freeze a moment in time.
The exhibition premieres in New York the work of Swiss artist Jules Spinatsch with a
selection from his photographic project Temporary Discomfort (2001-2003). The
pictures in this project document the security preparations surrounding several
major international political events: the January 2001 and January 2003 World
Economic Forums (WEF) in Davos; the July 2001 G8 summit in Genoa; the February 2002
WEF in New York; and the June 2003 G8 summit in Geneva and Evian. The main piece in
Temporary Discomfort is an installation comprising a large panorama into which
thousands of still images are compiled, along with three video pieces. The images
show preparations for a high-security lockdown in the artist’s hometown of Davos
during the January 2003 WEF, which are revealed as meticulously planned and tightly
controlled. In the period leading up to the WEF, Spinatsch recorded with a
remote-controlled camera 2,500 single images in the course of three hours, from 6:35
to 9:30 a.m.
After the recording, he assembled the resulting shots in a gridded, high-resolution
panorama that shows random moments captured frame by frame, as well as the
transition from dawn to early morning.
The New Photography series is made possible by JGS, Inc.
Image: Barbara Probst, Exposure #6A, N.Y.C., Central Park, 06.04.01, 2:44 p.m., 2001 Ultrachrome ink on cotton paper 5 parts 70 x 105 cm or 105 x 70 cm/27 1/2 x 41 1/2 or 41 1/2 x 27 1/2 inches each Edition of 5
MoMA (Photography Galleries - Third floor)
11 West 53 Street - New York