Knocked Sideways
Such a simple idea, flipping photographs on their side. Photographer Laurent Dejente overturns gravity and creates a feeling of vertigo in his captivating, surreal images. Blink and look twice.
Visit the Scophy website and scroll through the other cool images in the Photo Tuesdays collection.
Into the Darkroom
Some people pay good money to have their creased and cracked vintage family photos restored. I find it far more satisfying to go the other way. With the judicious layering of textures in Photoshop, I remove the veneer of clarity from my digital photos. It’s sort of like going back into the darkroom, but the reverse.
Age mellows out brash snapshots; distinguishes them; bestows on them a genteel air of days of yore. Call it fakery if you will – I prefer the term instant nostalgia.
Guilt-free
I adore these porcelain ice creams by Adelaide artist Wayne McAra. They look absolutely good enough to eat, totally guilt-free (ahem). They celebrate his childhood memories of visiting his grandmother, who was sincerely convicted of the goodness of ice cream, and served a little at the end of every meal.
He also serves these gilt-free, in delicate pastel tints – although I prefer the luxury version myself.
Kapoor’s Void
Anish Kapoor is an Indian-born British sculptor, having lived and work in London since the early 1970s. He first came to notice with his biomorphic sculptures made from elemental materials such as granite, limestone, marble, pigment and plaster. In September 2009 he became the first living artist to have a solo exhibition at the Royal Academy of Arts.
I first discovered his work in the early 1990s. I remember pieces like black holes: dark blue eggs and domes, such as At the Hub of Things, exhibited in a stark white room. They yawned their vastness into eternity, swallowing the light. These were relatively small pieces, yet their impenetrable solidity seemed somehow to convey an immense presence – like the enigmatic obelisks in Kubrik’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. They confound and defy you, yet offer a wordless challenge.
Kapoor said then of his work, “In the end, I’m talking about myself. And thinking about making nothing, which I see as a void. But then that’s something, even though it really is nothing.”
His work grew bigger and bigger, until they were really set on a vast scale, engulfing the landscape, imposing their enormity on tiny human beings reduced to the size of grasshoppers. You stepped into his work – literally – and entered another universe where time stopped. Smaller pieces, mirrors, reflected their surroundings, disappearing into the landscape.
Of the extraordinary Leviathan, which was the annual ‘Monumenta’ installation at the Grand Palais in Paris, Kapoor says, “A single object, a single form, a single colour... My ambition is to create a space with in a space that responds to the height and luminosity of the Nave at the Grand Palais. Visitors will be invited to walk inside the work, to immerse themselves in colour, and it will, I hope, be a contemplative and poetic experience.”
Explore his work in greater detail on his wonderful website. At first the single page of text can be mind-boggling, and finding a particular piece can be like searching for a needle in a haystack, but the picking the way through the trail is rewarding. There are numerous galleries of his pieces, as well as works on paper, his sketchbooks and links to press material.
Images from Kapoor’s website unless otherwise indicated.
Love Lace
I certainly do Love Lace, and was very excited to visit this exhibition at the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney in early March. 134 artists from 20 countries create intricate artworks that go far beyond the traditional textile techniques that were primarily used to trim our grandmothers’ petticoats.
Lace reveals and conceals, suggesting sensuality when utilised in garments. Yet when lace is worked into architecture, interior design and sculptures – sometimes on an enormous scale – it is the interplay of light and shadow that becomes riveting.
Curator Lindie Ward broadened the definition of lace to include any ‘openwork structure whose pattern of spaces is as important as the solid areas’. Materials used in these works include gold and silver wire, linen and silk as well as mulberry paper, tapa cloth, human and horse hair, titanium and optical fibre.
Overall, the exhibition was awe-inspiring and beautiful – I easily whiled away a few hours. It is easy to see why lace has fascinated artists and craftspeople, as well as the fashionable, for centuries. The possibilities and applications are endless, and the digital age can only enhance them.
(NB, this selection of images was largely dictated by the fact that the photos were taken under very low-light conditions with a hand-held camera; go to the website for a comprehensive catalogue and artists’ statements.)