Vera Lutter 2007
March 15, 2007- April 21, 2007
Reception: March 15, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
555 W 24th St
Vera LutterSan Marco, Venice, XX: December 3, 2005 (2005) | |
Instability, uncertainty, suspense, and monumentality are entities that I consider and think about; they
generate work.
--
Vera Lutter
Gagosian Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of new large-scale unique photographs by
Vera Lutter. In two distinct and opposite series. Venice and RHEINBRAUN, Lutter continues to
explore her fascination with the Manichean forces of nature and culture via a dialectics of
representation evinced from her innovative use of the camera obscura. In Lutter's conceptual
approach to this primitive form of photography, the apparatus records not only what exists in the
world outside but also its own condition. By choosing to retain the negative, rather than reprinting to
create a positive image, Lutter transforms the visual facts of her chosen environments into uncanny
looking-glass scenes that reflect on the two principal realities of time and space.
In the first of two groups of works that take Venice as their subject, Lutter sought to "render a place
that exists outside gravity," building on her previous recordings of industrial landscapes and cities
surrounded by water, such as Old Slip, New York (1995), and Cleveland (1997). Aided by a
serendipitous flood in Venice, she was able to capture mirage-like emanations of San Marco and
Piazza Leoni. These spectral landmarks appear to hover above their own image, mirrored in the
limpid ground on which they rest. Lutter returned to Venice the following year to record the area
where the Grand Canal flows into the Baccino, which then opens up into the lagoon. It is this unstable
body of water that gives Venice its special ethereal character but that, paradoxically, threatens the
floating city's very existence.
In contrast to the haunting romance of Venice is the RHEINBRAUN series that Lutter executed in
Hambach, an industrial region in Germany which, over the last century, has been topographically and
culturally defined by the extensive strip-mining of brown coal. Drawn by the same entropic
melancholy that has fascinated artists from Robert Smithson to the Bechers, Lutter (who,
significantly, also grew up in this region) has produced her own meditations on the transformation
and devastation of this landscape. In a dramatic shift of scale and perspective, she captures the
world's largest machine cutting huge swathes through the earth's surface to harvest raw fuel for
human use.
Vera Lutter was born in Germany and lives and works in New York. Her photographs have been
exhibited extensively in the US and abroad, including the Kunsthaus Graz, Austria; the Kunsthalle,
Basel; Dia Art Foundation, New York; Museum of Modern Art, New York; and the Whitney Museum of
American Art, New York.
This exhibition is accompanied by fully illustrated catalogue featuring an essay by British art
historian Michael Newman.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | | | Gallery | Gagosian Gallery | | Address | 555 W 24th St New York (Chelsea) NY, 10011 United States | | Phone | 212-741-1111 | | Fax | 212-741-9611 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 10-6 | |
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