Wednesday, 14 December 2011

SIMRYN GILL




SIMRYN GILL’s work questions the coherence of systems that humans create to ‘know’ the world around them. Working with a myriad of materials, including books, plant materials, photographs and other found objects, she encourages the viewer to reject a rigid classification of their surroundings in favour of arrangements which offer uncertainty, disturbance and new possibilities.

For Untitled, SIMRYN GILL used books as a raw material, choosing words such as ‘because’, ‘vessel’, ‘always’, ‘jealous’, and ‘lull’, and removing them from the books to investigate if, and how, words lose or take on meaning when taken away from their intended structures and contexts. She developed and expanded the selection of words throughout the process of reading and searching each book. A delicate lattice-work is left of the pages from which the words have been hand-torn by Gill and three assistants. By removing words from books, the artist opens up new readings, evoking the complexities of world histories through the ways that the English language has filtered into different places. The word ‘vessel’, for example, immediately calls to mind a ship in British usage whereas in India it describes domestic food containers. By giving individual words a physical and sensual presence, she draws us to their sounds, patterns and visual symmetries.

SIMRYN GILL @ TATE MODERN

Monday, 5 December 2011

ELLIE DAVIES












ELLIE DAVIES /// COME WITH ME



ELLIE DAVIES

DIANA SHEARWOOD











DIANA SHEARWOOD /// BEHIND THE MALL

Diana Shearwood’s series entitled Behind the Mall is an exploration of the visual propaganda of mobile food advertising. Its central theme is the industrialization of our food and the dulling of our perception to a point where we are removed from any direct knowledge of our food production. It is also intended to reveal both the humour and irony in our everyday landscape that are not always immediately evident.


DIANA SHEARWOOD

STEFAN NITOSLAWSKI








STEFAN NITOSLAWSKI /// META-MORPHOSIS

I always wanted to break out of my body and shape-shift into another form. It is a means of escape or liberation from the limits of the persona. Although such morphing is imagined, my camera can make it concrete.

Using precise choreography and lighting I record a transformation on one frame without further manipulation. Like a shot in cinema, the image is constructed over time with rehearsed movement. The results yield raw states of human emotion.



STEFAN NITOSLAWSKI /// STATEMENT

I find it difficult to clearly define the physical shape of my body. Sometimes I feel tall, sometimes small, sometimes beautiful or ugly, sometimes powerful, joyful or angry. These specific emotions affect my physical perception of myself. They take an actual shape: walking in a good mood I can feel as oddly huge as an eight foot giant, sometimes when feeling shy short people seem taller than me, joyous my face feels big and round or my face can assume bizarre contortions when irritated. I feel the physicality of these emotions as concrete things. I’m a shape-shifter; emotions morph my body sense into odd forms.


My photographic images reflect this awareness; I seek to break the body out of its purely physical human form. I record the ephemeral perception of the internal landscape. Like a snake shedding its skin I use the medium of photography to wiggle the model from their shell to draw out their inner self.

Photography can be brutally selective in its capture of reality. A click of the shutter freezes a moment in time. My work goes in the opposite direction. Instead of capturing a fraction of an event I build the photographic image over time. This approach is more akin to filmmaking than photography. In a movie one choreographs actors and camera to support an emotive theme. In the same way I will develop movement but to record it onto a single frame. I extended the shutter’s time to allow for a person’s movements to sculpt an unusual form.

Collaborating with a model I develop a sequence of gestures to capture the transformation. I start with an idea for a figure or for an emotion then elaborate the sequence to express that original design. Using precise choreography, specific placing and type of light and particular camera settings I trace an image in one shot. There is no manipulation of the images afterwards. Only the work on set spawns the metamorphosis.

Through bodily movement we express our inner self. Each person walks differently as their step reveals their personality. The same is true for a more complex sequence. This insight resonates within my images as each model generates images of a particular character. Some models move to create figures that tend to be more bold, some fearful, others angelic, some androgynous or animalistic. Each person morphs into a form that is unusually strange yet reflects elements of their inner landscape.

**Images are courtesy of the artist**

STEFAN NITOSLAWSKI is now on view until January 8 2012 @ the Galerie Angers in old Montreal.



STEFAN NITOSLAWSKI


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