Bad Memory
September 7, 2006- October 14, 2006
541 W 25th St
Kent Gallery is pleased to open its fall season with Bad Memory,
an introspective series of photographs by
John Brill.
Bad Memory is an emotionally charged and intellectually rigorous
body of work spanning forty-five years. The contemporary prints
that make up this series derive from snapshots made by the
artist with his first camera, a plastic box camera that he
acquired for a few dollars when he was in the third grade.
Beginning when he was eight years old, he made his original
images between the years 1960 and 1963, inclusive.
Not merely a nostalgic look back at people when they were younger, or places when they were different, Bad Memory is
foremost a reinvigoration of what the artist found to be magical about photography on a very primal (i.e., pre-intellectual)
level--what Brill refers to as "the utterly intoxicating notion that an eight-year-old kid can manipulate space and time with
a two-dollar plastic box." For Brill, the very act of photographing was transformative, conferring a mystical status on what
otherwise were ordinary people, objects, and events. The nature of experience in general was fundamentally changed
through the act of photographing, the camera functioning as a magic wand, anointing the mundane with an immortal
glow. The resulting body of work is a poignantly reimagined view of a young boy's inner world when that world was made
magical by the discovery of photography.
Significantly, the seminal collection of snapshot images that led to Bad Memory was not some long-lost archive,
rediscovered by a mature artist late in life. Rather, it was something with which the artist remained continuously
intimate, and with which he maintained an ongoing dialogue, informing his evolving sensibility, guiding his lifelong body
of work, and culminating in the series Bad Memory. Brill says, "More than anything, [this ongoing dialogue] revealed to
me a bridge between the deeply personal and the rigorously theoretical, showing these seemingly incongruous
perspectives to be more like points on a continuum than fundamentally different ways to consider a photograph."
Brill’s conceptual and subversive approach to the techniques and language inherent in the photographic process stands
in clear contrast to current trends in photography. All of the selenium-toned silver prints in this body of work were
hand-made by the artist utilizing traditional darkroom methods. Moreover, they are the products of several generations of
reworking. This approach to image creation and post-exposure enhancement has conspicuous affinities with the
Pictorialists of the early 20th Century who, through techniques of soft focus and darkroom manipulation, sought to
further break up a picture's sharpness to create images that are more expressive than purely descriptive. In
contradistinction to the largely aesthetic goals of the Pictorialists, however, the intended purpose of losing detail here is
to render these images as they'd be imperfectly remembered without reference to some external objective record.
Working in reverse, Brill has taken existing objective records (the original drugstore prints) and created from them an
imperfect (and, ultimately, a partially fictive) subjective recollection--the exact opposite of what the creation of
photographic records is normally intended to accomplish. Even the people who appear in these pictures--invariably, close
family members--have been obscured to the point of functioning as interchangeable generic props in a subjective
psychological landscape. Ultimately, Bad Memory yearns not for an accurate view of the past, but for the prevailing
personal sensibility that transcends such a view. This ghostly reality inevitably becomes a deceptively powerful
collaboration, as viewers unconsciously seek to impose specificity on Brill’s enigmatic imagery.
___________________
John Brill has been making photographic images his entire life. In addition to his work as an artist, he has also created an important archive of scientific and natural history photographs of fishes, about which he also writes, as well as ongoing photographic collections chronicling the lives of himself and his family. For his most recent series, Bad Memory, Brill has taken his photographic sensibility full-circle by creating a body of contemporary silver prints that derive from snapshots made with his first camera, a plastic box camera that he acquired for a few dollars when he was in the third grade. Beginning when he was eight years old, he made his original images between the years 1960 and 1963, inclusive.
Bad Memory is an emotionally charged and intellectually rigorous body of work spanning forty-five years. Working in reverse, Brill has taken existing visual documents (the original drugstore prints) and created from them an imperfect (and, ultimately, a partially fictive) subjective recollection--the exact opposite of what the creation of photographic records is normally intended to accomplish. Through several generations of reworking, empirical detail has been selectively sacrificed in order to render these images as they'd be imperfectly remembered without reference to some external objective record. Thus, Bad Memory yearns not for an accurate view of the past, but for the prevailing personal sensibility that transcends such a view.
Significantly, the seminal collection of snapshot images that led to Bad Memory was not some long-lost archive, rediscovered by a mature artist late in life. Rather, it was something with which the artist remained continuously intimate, and with which he maintained an ongoing dialogue, informing his evolving sensibility, guiding his lifelong body of work, and culminating in the series Bad Memory. Brill says, "More than anything, [this ongoing dialogue] revealed to me a bridge between the deeply personal and the rigorously theoretical, showing these seemingly incongruous perspectives to be more like points on a continuum than fundamentally different ways to consider a photograph."
Not merely a nostalgic look back at people when they were younger, or places when they were different, Bad Memory is foremost a reinvigoration of what the artist found to be magical about photography on a very primal (i.e., pre-intellectual) level--what Brill refers to as "the utterly intoxicating notion that an eight-year-old kid can manipulate space and time with a two-dollar plastic box." For Brill, the very act of photographing was transformative, conferring a mystical status on what otherwise were ordinary people, objects, and events. The nature of experience in general was fundamentally changed through the act of photographing, the camera functioning as a magic wand, anointing the mundane with an immortal glow. The resulting body of work is a poignantly reimagined view of a young boy's inner world when that world was made magical by the discovery of photography.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | map | | Gallery | Kent Gallery | | Address | 541 W 25th St, 2nd Fl New York (Chelsea) NY, 10001 United States | | Phone | 212-627-3680 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 10-6 | |
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