wall space gallery | the flat file

January 24, 2012

ND12 – Greer Muldowney

We focus on size today, and the ability to fill a frame. Crossing Territories artist Greer Muldowney has managed to convey significant size in a small package. The boundaries in her images not only look at constricting space, its also about how we constrain people as well. The images in her series, 6,426 per km2, Greer looks at how we create density in a small space, in this case Hong Kong. Her work is vibrant, structural, and highly detailed. The best part is the images don’t take up an entire wall to make the point. At 20×24 inches, she has managed to give us the feeling we are standing on a curb looking into these structures.

from her artist statement -

At 6,426 people per km2, Hong Kong boasts the most densely populated urban center in the world. The reality of sustainable practices, depletion of resources and a shifting global power paradigm pervade media involving China, and its Western syndicate territory, Hong Kong. By making imagery here, I ask viewers to contemplate these issues, but to also see these places as homes; not statistics. As the living cities and infrastructure that address cultural standards and progressive technologies. These photographs do not propose a reality so different from the spin of contemporary media, but asks an audience on the other side of the world, the Western world, to reflect on whether these images provide a surrogate for wonderment or trepidation for a changing global climate and future.

Kwai HIng

Cheung Sha Wan #2

Cheung Sha Wan

Aberdeen

Lai Chi Kok

January 23, 2012

ND12 – Heidi Kirkpatrick

Filed under: alternative process, Uncategorized — The Flat File @ 9:00 am

Heidi Kirkpatrick is a force of nature.

I have been a fan for a very long time, and when the opportunity availed itself with her inclusion in Crossing Territories, I was thrilled to have her work hang here in the gallery. Her complex detailed images, full of symbolism yet open for interpretation, are a feast for the eyes. So much to play with, participate in, its always hard to decide on selecting just one to hold in your hand.

Her work takes common objects and breathes into them new life. Her use of the female form, in all their beautiful curvy shapes, gives softness to structure, sensuousness to hard edged specimens. Found objects, like mint tins, silk boxes, cigar, cigarette and souvenir containers, all become handcrafted works of art. It is a playful way to showcase her work, as well as a way to transcend what a photograph is and how we perceive showing photographs.

From Heidi’s artist statement -

I am in love with film. All of my work is made with film. I shoot on film. I print on film. I do all of my own work in my darkroom. I like it dripping off my elbows. I do not use a lot of fancy equipment. My “models” are the people who are closest to me, my family and friends. I love layering the film positives over anything and everything I can think of or find. My studio is filled with found objects that inspire me, and photographs, lots and lots of photographs.
I often use photographs to transform these found objects into pieces of art…..

I also live with a substantial amount of physical pain and have for many years. In my continual search for an answer, as well as my way of dealing with the unexplained, I dissect my copy of Gray’s Anatomy. The pages find their way into my work, layered under images of those closest to me. The illustrations bind, clothe and wrap the body. Putting the inside on the outside, I wear my heart on my sleeve.

Reminiscent of nineteenth century cased images and tintypes; Specimens are housed in small hinged tins that open and close to reveal or conceal the secrets they hold. Plates are made in sixth plate size on copper that has been finessed with fire creating patterns similar to collodion pour lines of vintage tintypes. These works depart from the frame as they are arranged on a table top or a shelf, often stacked or placed side by side to reveal narratives of family life or the complexities of the feminine allure while drawing on memories, contemporary issues, and visual formality.

For Fredrick

Reveal

shattered

cord

exposed

January 20, 2012

ND12 – Brook Reynolds

Brook Reynolds, part of Crossing Territories, has images that are seductive, introspective and gorgeous to look at. Her striking gelatin silver prints are full of great contrast, rich blacks, details in the shadows. Technically stunning, these images are also introspective, quiet, and allow us as viewers to fall into the organic shape and  lose ourselves.

Taking simple inconsequential objects, Brooke makes them important and unordinary.

From her artist statement -

Enso photographs are  created by the process of combining slow exposures with motion, and inspired by the practice of Soto Zen Buddhism. Enso is the Japanese word for circle, and is a Zen symbol for the endless interconnectedness and impermanence of all life. According to a Japanese story from the 8th Century, the Zen Master Kyozan created the first enso painting in response to a monk’s request for a gatha, a written poem or statement, expressing enlightenment and said, “Thinking about this and then understanding it is second best; not thinking about it and understanding it is third best.” He did not say what is first best.

We show only five images here, based on her submission to New Directions, but take a look at her website to see more of these beautiful images.

Human Hair Enso

Petrified Wood Enso

Snake Skin Enso

Razor Clam Enso

Wild Rose Enso

January 17, 2012

ND12 – William LeGoullon

Crossing Territories artist William LeGoullon has a unique perspective, scientific yet creative. His abstract images evoke geologic rock slices, star charts and even stained glass windows. Taking liquids and converting them to solids, the objects under the microscope take on a mysterious aura, making us ask questions, wonder and delve into the ideas behind the images.

Here are some of the answers. Bill’s Artist Statement.

My latest works express my fascination with beverages, the variety of methodical processes through which we craft them, and the detailed makeup of each liquid we drink.
Stemming from my work as both an artist and as a barista and bartender, my interest is in concocting a recipe of beverage culture, art, science, and theory with regard to what we as humans consume. I am continually inspired by observing what has been left behind, the pieces that make up the whole, and the clues that inspire examination. In this series, I treat the world’s top five most consumed man-made beverages like scientific specimens, allowing each liquid sample to dry before photographing them using a microscope. The resulting images provide us with a chance to analyze these fingerprints of drinkable culture as an act of art consumption.

what do these images evoke for you?

Tea Stain

Beer Specimen

Cola Specimen

Coffee Specimen

Wine Specimen

January 16, 2012

ND12 – Bryan David Griffith

I had the pleasure of meeting Bryan David Griffith, today’s highlighted Crossing Territories artist, at a portfolio review in New Orleans way back in 2010. His palladium images are beautiful, soft and romantic. Bryan’s images come from his series A Big World Wandering, images he invites us as viewers to step into, slow down and take a deep breath, finding beauty in everything around us.

Bryan’s images are all created in-camera. Using home made lenses on medium and large format cameras, the evocative soft focus, the open space, the details all bring up our own stories. We inhabit the spaces Bryan creates. The Palladium process only adds to the depth and interest of the images.

From Bryan’s statement -

My photographs are metaphors for my experience of being human in such a world.  My work is about following your heart and finding your way, despite a nagging angst. It’s about accepting ambiguity, climbing past your own insignificance, and finding wonder on the other side. These photographs aren’t literal documents, but visions, constantly reinterpreted with experience—mirrors that conjure up what you hold deep down inside. The small, anonymous figures in my work are you and I, contemplating those choices that, looking back, define our lives.

Take a look.

Traverse

Going Up

Navigating the Forest

Jumping Through

Entrance

January 13, 2012

ND12 – Zelda Zinn

Filed under: Uncategorized — The Flat File @ 2:06 pm

Zelda Zinn, today’s featured artist from Crossing Territories, is a Los Angeles based photographer who looked skyward to create her image Trickle, part of New Directions 2012.

Zelda’s work is from her series Guided Imagery, showing the graphic and fluid nature of material, in all its varied shapes and forms. This work is a Rorschach test. To me a great game to see what you can find in the form each image takes. Her initial idea came out of the clouds in the New Mexico sky. When I look at the work, diaphanous, topographic and geologic forms spring into the frame, and the stories I craft in my head bring me back to look again and again finding new ideas, new shapes….

the genesis of Guided Imagery -

This new body of work came from pondering the ever-changing New Mexico sky. Every time I looked up, it seemed there was a new formation of clouds, evidence of unseen forces. The subtle and ephemeral nature of these compositions impressed me, and I began by trying to imitate them. The initial results looked like photographs of clouds—they were too “real” to interest me. Moving on, I kept playing with the same diaphanous material, not sure where it would lead.

I found myself drawn to the shapes that sparked a reference to other objects. What appealed to me about them was their ability to allude to other things through such limited means. Providing so little in depth, “information,” material, and tonal variation, they tug at the seams of what a photograph is. If they succeed in holding our attention, it is through their power of suggestion.

what do you think?

Dragon

Trickle

Labyrinth

Chick

3 Giants

Rave Review for Crossing Territories!

Filed under: Uncategorized — The Flat File @ 1:06 pm

Thank you to Joe Woodard for his enthusiastic review of Crossing Territories, curated by Debra Klomp Ching. For those of you who haven’t made it to the gallery yet, now would be a great time to stop in and see this outstanding group of images from tremendously talented artists.

Take a look at this -

BY JOSEF WOODARD, NEWS-PRESS CORRESPONDENT

ART REVIEW

‘New Directions 2012: Crossing Territories’

For any aficionado of fine art photography who has somehow managed to avoid the alluring Wall Space Gallery, now a year-and-change into its vibrant life on the Santa Barbara art scene, the current exhibition should serve as a ripe primer for the gallery’s aesthetic agenda. New Directions, now in its sixth year, and 2012′s “Crossing Territories” is the second annual group show in this space, with a guest curator culling work relevant to the Wall Space theme of promoting and showcasing contemporary photography and tracking new ideas and methods in the medium.

This time around, New York gallerist Debra Klomp Ching has been deputized to curate the exhibition, with the stated goal of examining the ways in which a diverse assortment of current photographers are “addressing the intersection of form and content,” to quote the curator’s statement. To make a long story a bit shorter, the broad range of intriguing pictures and processes seen here indicate a photography scene very much in flux, looking backward and forward in the effort to see anew.

Perhaps aptly, the first images we find in the show, close to the front door of the house-based gallery, come to us courtesy of Google, that present-day digital Svengali and info-guru source. Meggan Gould gathers the visual raw materials for her work via that common practice of the “Google search,” and then compresses the findings into fuzzy, dense field reports, which take on their own patina and definition of “content.” In this case, for instance, the titles tell all with “Mona + Lisa” and “Mugshot.”

Narrative strategies come in different shapes and backstories. Colette Campbell Jones’ “Stories,” of figures tucked into the brick tenement building of a Welsh coal-mining town, is an example of her practice of scanning and stitching composite imagery together into an unabashedly unreal, yet extra-real, “digital darkroom hybrid.”

From the more deliciously simple end of the technical spectrum, Odette England’s “Without Me” series features deceptively casual snapshots with the portrait of the artist cut out. What’s missing adds a strange presence to the picture, via the scent of absence.

Speaking of strange presences, the Japanese artist currently known as Photographer Hal shows what is probably this show’s most instantly eye-grabbing print, from his “Flesh Love” series. The photographer seeks out volunteer models — couples — from Raves, and asks them to pose in close embraces in festively decorated vacuum-packed clear plastic, snapping as many exposures as he can in the several seconds before they’re allowed to breathe again.

No doubt, the bizarre circumstances of the process and concept, not to mention the striking end result, captures the imagination in some new way. Twisting an old adage of the photographic medium, the artist’s project involves a capturing and sealing-off of the “moment,” adding sprinkles of Japanese kitsch, low kink and high concept.

Suggestions of artistic impulses from beyond the conventional, representational ken of photography also filter into the mix here. Laura Wolf’s photograms blend photographic techniques and the handmade gesture, and S. Gayle Stevens’ antiqued mosaic effect filters natural imagery through an abstractionist prism. More dramatically, the most abstract piece in the gallery is Bill Miller’s large, and self-explanatorily titled, “Ruined Polaroid No. 40,” which looks like nothing so much as a scrappy but charismatic kinfolk to a Rothko painting, but achieved through despoiled photographic material.

One perhaps unintentional but ever-seductive theme in this show — and in photography generally — has to do with the elevation of the commonplace, the practice of focusing on objects in the world we take for granted, and finding profundity there. William LeGoulon achieves that feat with “Tea Stain,” and Brooks Reynolds with the quixotic, dark “Human Hair Enso.”

In an extension of that high-low culture mashing concept, another of the impressive pieces in the show spins off of California poolside consciousness, but with a disarming twist. Cathrin Schulz’ “Authenticity of America, Poolside 13″ is a fairly epic-sized print, but makes a subtle impact by virtue of its being largely a white void space, trickling down from a narrow horizontal band of “content” at the very top: a stately row of pool chairs is underscored by a wash of that characteristic “swimming pool blue,” which quickly melts into whiteness of being.

In this case, vis a vis the curatorial thought bubble of the show, form and content swim into the realm of dreams. Photography can go there just as easily as into the prickly thicket of what’s “real.”

January 12, 2012

ND12 – Cathrin Schulz

Filed under: color, documentary, exhibition, New Directions, Uncategorized, water — The Flat File @ 9:46 am

AUTHENTI©ITY OF AMERICA | POOLSIDE 02

Spending an afternoon sitting by the pool seems so glamorous, doesn’t it? It’s a place we go to watch, be observed, admired, to soak up sun, meet up with friends, and often find new ones…That gathering of a diverse community in a public space. Crossing Territories artist Cathrin Schulz explores the ideas of perception, of perfection – the split between what we see above the water line and what lies below.

From Cathrin’s artist statement -

“POOLSIDE” is a series which is part of a long-term project called “AUTHENTI(C)ITY of AMERICA”documenting my vision of America as a German Photographer. Immersing myself in the urban scenery of the United States I perceive its authenticity and diverseness’ and embrace it in soul places. With POOLSIDE I sense a piece of Atlanta’s Soul, discovering a part of its culture….The energy of the pools, a flat continuation of water, obscuring what is below the surface was a distinctive emotional atmosphere, sensed by me intuitively: solitary, still and private. A lack of distortion, an intimate view and emptiness of human presence convey a timelessness creating a blank screen onto which one can project ones own memories.

Her desaturated images, specific sight lines, and looking at the objects without human presence lets us define our own narrative, place ourselves in that location, tell our own stories.

AUTHENTI©ITY OF AMERICA | POOLSIDE 11

AUTHENTI©ITY OF AMERICA | POOLSIDE 06

AUTHENTI©ITY OF AMERICA | POOLSIDE 13

January 11, 2012

ND12 – Tami Bone

Filed under: alternative process, composite, exhibitions, New Directions, Uncategorized — The Flat File @ 9:00 am

Tami Bone’s work is magical. Part of Crossing Territories, her work exemplifies the idea of crafted narratives. Her images tell mythical stories, black and white memory driven tales that have no beginning or no end. You can fall into her poetic narratives, bring your own mysteries, and travel off into her swirling light and deep shadow.

Her work starts as written notes, that merge into ideas, that become a group of images, that blossom as illustrative stories. These are images I can look at all day and find something new each time I walk by them.

About Tami -

Tami Bone spent her growing up years in deep South Texas and along the Texas Gulf Coast. Today she lives in Austin, close to the rugged Texas Hill Country. She attended The University of Texas, although her interest in photography began later. For much of her adult life, she has pieced together an ongoing photographic education, including formal classes, workshops and continuous self-education. Her past photographic experience is in portraiture, where she specialized in photographing children using black and white film, and natural light.

I have had the pleasure of working with Tami on Life Support Japan, in March of last year, and she was part of our last exhibition at the gallery, Multiple Exposures.

Mythos

Fish Story

The Epiphany

Black Winged Bird

Girl in the Moon.

January 10, 2012

ND12 – Laura Wulf

Filed under: alternative process, New Directions, photograms, Uncategorized, wall space gallery — The Flat File @ 9:00 am

Today’s selected Crossing Territories artist is Laura Wulf. She has created stunning photograms that have to be seen in person to be realized as masterpieces.  Looking at them as a jpg intrigues me, but seeing them in person wows me. They are beautiful, clever, creative. Using chromogenic paper exposing bold color, then following up by scratching patterns into the print creates designs that magnify the simplicity, yet intricate attention to detail.

In Laura’s words -

Blending the primitive act of scratching with the modern technology of color photography and collaborating with chance, has allowed my curiosity to be open to, and moved by, the unknown and the previously unseen. The work explores mark-making, as well as the material’s potential for color, and each piece is unique. The resulting pieces refer to painting and drawing, and are part of an ontological dialogue across media.

Stop in to the gallery if you can to take a closer look at this beautiful work.

Untitled (19110732)

Untitled (03040715)

Untitled (25030706)

Untitled (01070612)

Untitled (01061005)

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