Alberto Garcia Alix: Galeria Juana De Aizpuru. (Seville).Alberto Garcia Alix is a veteran photographer whom the art world had thought little about up until a few years ago. Now that our sense of the medium has expanded, his work, strongly tied to a specific time and place-Madrid in the '80s-has succeeded in moving beyond this context and can be seen simply as one of the best oeuvres in contemporary Spanish photography. His work is consistently documentary in approach, although on occasion what's documented is quite personal. Garcia Alix's work employs a straightforward vocabulary in capturing images from reality, even if he sometimes reconstructs scenes for the camera. His genres are essentially two: portraiture portraiture, the art of representing the physical or psychological likeness of a real or imaginary individual. The principal portrait media are painting, drawing, sculpture, and photography. From earliest times the portrait has been considered a means to immortality. and still life-though on occasion the space depicted becomes more important than the objects it contains. Garcia Alix's images often refer back to the artist himself, sometimes in oblique ways. He becomes the narrator NARRATOR. A pleader who draws narrs serviens narrator, a sergeant at law. Fleta, 1. 2, c. 37. Obsolete. of histories in which he himself plays the protagonist. "Tell Me Words of Love in Spanish" was the title of Garcia Alix's most recent exhibition, which focused on photographs produced in the past two years but also included a few images dating back more than a decade. Aside from the fact that he now works in color, the main difference between the earlier and more recent work is that his panorama has widened. This exhibition included not only portraits of individuals but also "portraits" of spaces that make up a fragmentary frag·men·tar·y adj. Consisting of small, disconnected parts: a picture that emerges from fragmentary information. frag narrative taking place in Barcelona, Berlin, and Formentera, as well as photographs of shoes-a recurrent image throughout his career-shown as elliptical el·lip·tic or el·lip·ti·cal adj. 1. Of, relating to, or having the shape of an ellipse. 2. Containing or characterized by ellipsis. 3. a. , fetishistic objects. Several of the new photographs are self-portraits; others simply suggest the artist's presence through the objects shown. A great number of works belong to a series of erotic tableaux, showing various women-and one man-posing in an openly sexual manner. Some of these images evince e·vince tr.v. e·vinced, e·vinc·ing, e·vinc·es To show or demonstrate clearly; manifest: evince distaste by grimacing. the photographer's desire to situate sit·u·ate tr.v. sit·u·at·ed, sit·u·at·ing, sit·u·ates 1. To place in a certain spot or position; locate. 2. To place under particular circumstances or in a given condition. adj. his subjects in places that contradict their sensuality or contrast it with an evocation EVOCATION, French law. The act by which a judge is deprived of the cognizance of a suit over which he had jurisdiction, for the purpose of conferring on other judges the power of deciding it. This is done with us by writ of certiorari. of realism--for example Rita (piernas abiertas) (Rita [legs open]), 2001, in which the model is pictured in a warehouse with a mattress pushed up against the wall behind her. In El Senor X (John Doe John Doe formerly, any plaintiff; now just anybody. [Am. Pop. Usage: Brewer Dictionary, 329] See : Everyman ), 2001, the urgency of the photograph is clear: The model has pulled down his pants in the middle of a hallway, exposing his enormous member to the camera. These erotic photographs remind us that over the years Garcia Alix has been associated with a lowlife aesthetic. And clearly something of this tendency remains: Porn actors, Hell's Angels Hell's Angels npl → Hell's Angels pl , and club bouncers all play important roles in the pictures. One pair of portraits, however, suffered from a sense of artificiality unusual in Garcia Alix's work. Una mujer para Elvis (A woman for Elvis), 2002, and Michelle, 2001, recall the tiresome cliches of Spanish photographic portraiture of the '60s and '70s: unnatural, overly dramatic facial expressions and gestures--like having the subject shake her hair--are a failed attempt to give the image a sense of primitive energy and formal plasticity. Such pictures represent an unfortunate step backward. Translated from Spanish by Michele Fagner. |
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