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Barbara Probst: Murray Guy.


On January 7, 2000, at 10:37 PM, Munich- and New York-based photographer Barbara Probst first employed a technique that remains unique among contemporary artists. Using a remote-control device, she simultaneously triggered the shutters of twelve cameras strategically positioned around a New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 rooftop, and the resultant set of poster-size prints--in which Probst, her cameras and tripods, and the noirish urban scene all figure equally as subjects--anchored her last solo show at Murray Guy in 2004. The Rashomon-like multiplicity mul·ti·plic·i·ty  
n. pl. mul·ti·plic·i·ties
1. The state of being various or manifold: the multiplicity of architectural styles on that street.

2.
 of perspectives synthetically prolongs the cameras' "decisive moment," and this clash of temporal registers was the exhibition's most salient quality. For this show, consisting of eleven photographs constituting four artworks, Probst added emotional nuance nu·ance  
n.
1. A subtle or slight degree of difference, as in meaning, feeling, or tone; a gradation.

2. Expression or appreciation of subtle shades of meaning, feeling, or tone:
 and referential complexity to that first multipart "exposure."

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Exposure #36: Studio Munich, 09.26.05., 2:34 p.m., a five-part work that alternates black-and-white and color prints, unsettles one's sense not only of time but also of space. Viewing the photographs sequentially, one initially assumes that the young woman in a red sweater, her hands held up near the right side of her head, is standing outside, in or near a park. The second image, shot from behind the woman, exposes the artifice ar·ti·fice  
n.
1. An artful or crafty expedient; a stratagem. See Synonyms at wile.

2. Subtle but base deception; trickery.

3. Cleverness or skill; ingenuity.
 implied by inclusion of the word "studio" in the title: Here one sees, behind a camera on a tripod, the contours Contours may mean:
  • Contour lines on a map indicating elevation
  • The Contours, a Motown musical group notable for the hit single "Do You Love Me"
See also: plain
 of a room with floor-to-ceiling windows. The third frame peels back yet another layer of the construction, revealing the greenery in the background of the first picture to be no more than a studio backdrop. The fourth shot plunges one back into a conceivably "realistic" space (the grain of the photograph merges seamlessly with that of the backdrop), once again giving the impression that the woman is outside, this time on a street in New York's Chinatown. The final photograph is a close-up of the woman's face.

But of course one doesn't view these images consecutively. Instead, the successive revelations encourage the eye to ping-pong between the prints, picking out details overlooked on first pass. One gradually assembles a mental model of the depicted scene, pairing each camera with the images it has captured. But there remains an estranging es·trange  
tr.v. es·tranged, es·trang·ing, es·trang·es
1. To make hostile, unsympathetic, or indifferent; alienate.

2. To remove from an accustomed place or set of associations.
 detail, noticeable only because of the enlargements' imposing size: The presence of a young boy lying on the studio floor, his head and an arm visible in the bottom-right corner of the third print. This returns one to the background of the first print: The park scene is naggingly familiar because it was lifted from Michelangelo Antonioni's Blowup (1966). (Exposure #37: N.Y.C. 249 W 34th Street, 11.07.05, 1:13 p.m., with its fashionably dressed, supine supine /su·pine/ (soo´pin) lying with the face upward, or on the dorsal surface.

su·pine
adj.
1. Lying on the back; having the face upward.

2.
 protagonist ogled by a plethora plethora /pleth·o·ra/ (pleth´ah-rah)
1. an excess of blood.

2. by extension, a red florid complexion.pletho´ric


pleth·o·ra
n.
1.
 of lenses, evokes the studio scenes in that film, but to different effect.) Probst's deconstruction deconstruction, in linguistics, philosophy, and literary theory, the exposure and undermining of the metaphysical assumptions involved in systematic attempts to ground knowledge, especially in academic disciplines such as structuralism and semiotics.  of the photograph's veracity--which, in these multipanel works, evokes cinematic precedents in both atmosphere and presentation--literally encompasses a fragment of a classic film on the same subject.

The other photographs in the show, all diptychs, hint at the complexities, temporal and otherwise, lodged in Exposure #36. These photographs evoke Christopher Williams's photographic deconstructions and Eadweard Muybridge's time-lapse studies. But Probst's fruitful investigation of photography's characteristics (and the operations of human memory) distinguishes her from both precursors precursors, (prēkur´srz),
n.pl particles or compounds that precede something.
 and peers.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:photographs exhibition
Author:Sholis, Brian
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2006
Words:538
Previous Article:Scott Treleaven: John Connelly Presents.(photograph exhibitions )
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