Kuckei + Kuckei
Berlin
Linienstrasse 158
+49 030 8834354 FAX +49 030 88683244
WEB
Barbara Probst
dal 24/8/2007 al 19/10/2007

Segnalato da

Kuckei + Kuckei


approfondimenti

Barbara Probst



 
calendario eventi  :: 




24/8/2007

Barbara Probst

Kuckei + Kuckei, Berlin

Exposure


comunicato stampa

Exposure

Kuckei + Kuckei is happy to announce the second solo show by Barbara Probst in Berlin. Since our first presentation in September 2005 Barbara Probst had several exhibitions in the USA which attracted a lot of attention.

A great success was the recent solo show at the Museum of Contemporary Photography in Chicago (April until June 2007). On the occasion of this exhibition a substantial catalogue was published by the Steidl-Verlag.

Last year the Museum of Modern Art in New York showed her work as part of the exhibition "new photography", together with works by Jonathan Monk and Jules Spinatsch. The MoMA acquired several works for the collection. Susequently Barbara Probst participated, amongst others, at the Museum of Photographic Arts San Diego, the McDonough Museum Youngstown State University Ohio and at the University of South Florida Contemporary Art Museum Tampa.

The exhibition will show four new multi-part works.

Back To The Beginning
On Barbara Probst's Photographic Series

Barbara Probst investigates the many ambiguities inherent to the photographic image. In her work the relationship of the photographic instant to reality is intensified in two distinct ways whereby the captured moment acquires an almost unsettling quality: on the one hand, Barabara Probst abandons the single-eye gaze of the camera and divides it into various points of view. On the other, she multiplies and diversifies the short moment of the shot. Thanks to a radio-controlled release system she can simultaneously trigger the shutters of several cameras pointed at the same event or subject from different angles and various distances. The depictions of each specific instant generated by this method constitute a series. The relationship of single shots to one another within a series is not determined by a common unifying principle or any stylistic markers. There is no formal proximity and no overall theme to tie the works together. Yet the photographs are bound by a tighter but still elusive link, namely the one and only moment of an exposure which is their very subject.

In our everyday life each instant is tied to a single experience no matter how complex this experience may be. We depend on a notion of time experienced as a sequence of events which seems to be indispensable to our sense of being. Different occurences can only be experienced at different moments and the same occurence can only be seen from one place. Every view depends on the position of one observer and a single point in time. It is only when we talk about God or the gods that we say they can see everything from any point and one thing from everywhere. The very object we behold can obstruct our sight and this can render everything else invisible. Photography operates within the field of viewpoints. The sense of loss that speaks out of every photograph has to do with the exceptional character of any singled out time fragment and the impossibility of superseding the single gaze. And every photograph is an attempt to elude this sense of loss.(...)

(...)The belief in an absolute truth of the photographic image has been thrown into doubt for a long time. There is no going back. Barbara Probst's endeavor to cast new light on the entire field of photographic activity offers an opportunity to break down or at least challenge the defining power of images. She has managed to cut an analytical path around the problem. But when all candidness is gone what is left of the world? A purely cynical destruction of the illusion would ultimately leave us disappointed. Yet as we view this series of images we feel a sense of relief. Since we cannot trust the pictures, we do not have to trust them. We are given permission to enjoy our experience because nothing compels us to believe. I escape the insistent claim of truth and the trap of taste. I do not have to judge each single photograph because this is not what is expected of me. Disappointment unexpectedly gives way to a suspended sense of freedom. We are called to find our way through the world as we pass by the pictures or skip over them. This moment of enlightenment questions our world of images precisely because it strives for reality.
Stefan Schessl

Image: Exposure #8: Munich, Nederlingerstrasse, 10.11.01, 7:56 p.m. 2001. Ultrachrome ink on cotton paper 2 parts 40 x 60 cm each

Kuckei + Kuckei
Linienstr. 158, D - 10115 Berlin
Tues-Fri 11am-6pm + Sat 11am-5pm

IN ARCHIVIO [44]
Hlynur Hallssons / Jenny Brillhart
dal 16/10/2015 al 18/12/2015

Attiva la tua LINEA DIRETTA con questa sede