Sadé and Goesele
September 7, 2006- October 14, 2006
Reception: September 7, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
535 W 24th St
Reeves Contemporary opens two exhibitions by photographers
Shuli Sadé and
Michael Goesele on September 7th, 2006, with an artists’ reception between 6-8 p.m. Their exhibitions will remain on view through October 14th.
German photographer,
Michael Goesele, opens his second show of new large-scale photographs at
Reeves Contemporary entitled “The Pure and Profound: Looking Beyond the Negative”, the show’s focus is Goesele’s further exploration into the depths of film with the process mordançage. Mordançage is a fascinating, arcane process dating from the late 1800's, and rarely found in our postmodern era. Each piece in the exhibition is an original gelatin silver print from a negative that he has manipulated by hand, through bleaching and dissolving away portions of the image. It is perhaps one of the most tactile and pure ways to realize a completely abstract work. Nonetheless, somehow the visual impression insistently refers back to organic forms; convincing us that we have seen these patterns and shapes in the natural world, but cannot remember where.
Furthermore, the printing process exhausts the film’s possibilities, thus each print from the manipulated negative is unique. The resulting hand-made prints are a stunning study in black and white, with riveting densities and a confounding depth of field; all overlaid in some instances with elegant, bright white strands of finely burned film.
Goesele continues to obscure the fine line between the origins of tactile art and the austere reality of film. The result is a series of unique photographs printed large scale, with surprising emotive impact. Goesele’s photographs have been exhibited throughout the United States and Europe as
well as acquired in private and permanent collections. His work has also been featured in the Annual Works on Paper art fair at the Armory on Park Avenue and numerous art publications.
Stills from
Shuli Sadé’s video project Running in Cycles document journeys from her studio to various destinations outside of the city and the return. The cyclical nature of going-and-coming creates the philosophical platform for this visual investigation.
Traveling by public transportations and taxicabs, Sadé chooses in advance the path and the length of her journeys, traveling each time by different bridges or tunnels to cross the river, but without any formal destination. Thus, the journey is about departure and return, and the space and time in between. The particulated and digitalized aspects of the video stills, in her mind, captures the evanescent quality of time in broken moments strung together by one’s memory of the past (the leaving) and anticipation of the future (the return). Time, then, is made visible, frame-by-frame.
Choosing the moment for the return is pivotal to the series, as it connotes the umbra of a metaphysical circuit: that of moving away from the familiar and known, and moving back to the home and identity. It is a wonderful elaboration of a psychological truth: in our day-to-day lives, the moment of departure engenders an implicit need to return — to order, to the known.
And yet, as we move through our day, the microcosm of the train car or taxicab becomes, temporarily, the known: a temporary dwelling cell linked to the landscapes and time by a constant visual contact. Sadé visually explores these strata of various heterotopias (taxicab, work space, city) as filtered through her lenses, capturing landscapes and architecture in transition.
Shuli Sadé is a New York based artist whose work refers again and again to architecture from diverse perspectives. She was the photographer on record for the Renzo Piano Workshops to document the recent renovation and addition to The Morgan Library. A suite of those composite images have been incorporated in a portfolio. Sadé has also done a book on the courtyards of the old city of Budapest, which will be in publication in 2007. A second book project currently underway is a departure from architecture; it captures people and landscapes along the Hudson Valley, inspired by nineteenth-century America’s paintings experiencing transcendence through landscape.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | | | Gallery | Reeves Contemporary | | Address | 535 W 24th St, 2nd Fl New York (Chelsea) NY, 10011 United States | | Phone | 212-714-0044 | | Fax | 212-714-0066 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 10-5:30 | |
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