This collection of images was selected from a larger number photographed in the artist's home over a period of several months and detail the varying qualities of sun light as it moves throughout the house at the last hours of the day.
"What I am looking at is subtle information, as it is being erased,
as it disappears from view, disappears from the world. It is the last
moment when all the illuminated imagery of our world gets put to rest.
It has a certain stillness I chase down in all my work. Everything
is rooted in vision, in submerging oneself in this spectacular visual
event that projects itself all around me at the end of each day."
Uta Barth in conversation with David Horvitz, ANPQuarterly, No.9, 2007
Alison Jacques Gallery is pleased to present Sundial,
Uta Barth's
new series of work. This collection of images was selected from a larger
number photographed in the artist's home over a period of several
months and detail the varying qualities of sun light as it moves throughout
the house at the last hours of the day. The chosen photographs were primarily
taken at dusk, when the play of light began to erase itself from the
walls and objects of the interior space. The provocative allure of these
images lies in the fact that they simultaneously evoke a sense of stillness
and slow continual movement.
The use of the repeated subject in this and previous
series of works allows both the artist and the viewer the chance to
explore duration through subtle details that might otherwise be missed.
Rather than dealing with subjects or narratives, Barth's photographs
explore visual
perception itself, and how meaning is located in the activity of looking.
In this way the artist uses the camera as a metaphor for human consciousness
or the mind. Barth's use of after-images reinforces the primary
importance of the optical experience. By rendering the phenomenon whereby
we retain a lasting impression in our eyes after staring at a brightly
lit scene Barth moves beyond the realm of what is possible to attain
solely with a camera. Working in this way allows the artist to express
space as simultaneously positive and negative, which adds further complexity
to her compositions.
Barth began photographing interior spaces in 1994
and since that time the ways in which she frames her compositions has
become increasingly important. By withholding visual information through
cropping, and eschewing a central compositional focus, the artist creates
an ambiguous sense of depth. Barth's subsequent arrangements of
images mimic the multi
focusing and constantly adjusting function of the eye and demonstrate
the permeability of internal and exterior space. The artist's project
continues a line of Phenomenological enquiry that seeks to provide a
direct description of human experience. By treating the interior of her
own home as a sundial Barth emphasises how consciousness, the world,
and the perceiving body are intertwined. Sundial reverses traditional
expectations of the photographic medium through inverting the world outside
the room into a projection within it.
Uta Barth (Born Berlin,1958) lives and works in
Los Angeles. Solo museum exhibitions include MCA, Chicago (1995) and
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles (1989). A mid-career
survey of Barth's work
was presented by the Henry Art Gallery in Seattle and the MCA in Houston
in 2000. Barth's work has been acquired by major public collections
including Tate, London; MoMA, New York; The Guggenheim Museum, New York;
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; and Moderna Museet, Stockholm. She is the
recipient of the 2005 Guggenheim Fellowship and the 2007 USA Artist award.
Opening may 29, 2008
Alison Jacques Gallery
16-18 Berners Street - London
Free admission