Catherine Opie: Gladstone Gallery.Catherine Opie's interest in community underpins an increasingly diverse body of work that ranges from life at home with partner, child, and pets to portraits of her neighborhood to the subcultures
This is a list of subcultures. A
You can assist by [ editing it] now. that haven't quite caught up to postmillennial post·mil·len·ni·al also post·mil·len·ni·an adj. Happening or existing after the millennium. Adj. 1. postmillennial - of or relating to the period following the millennium modernity. Opie appreciates life lived on one's own terms and to the fullest, and this optimism, at once personal and political, infuses and unites her art. Paralleling Opie's interest in capturing life on the local level is a curiosity about and desire to explore urban environments--New York, Chicago, St. Louis, Minneapolis. It is this impulse that gave rise to the works on view in her recent show at Gladstone Gallery, and, to an extent, they seem like a jarring departure: Bypassing the humanizing details of neighborhood culture, she turns away from opportunities to measure a city's pulse and character by its people and vernacular traditions (the very approach that we've come to expect from her). Instead, she opts for the hard, cold core of the power grid. Training her camera on concrete, glass, and steel, she captures an endless panorama of supersized corporate monoliths, with their attendant networks of plazas, roadways, and tunnels. The resultant black-and-white prints, with their deeply saturated tonalities, are somber, even melancholic mel·an·chol·ic adj. 1. Affected with or being subject to melancholy. 2. Of or relating to melancholia. , in large part because the scenes they depict are completely depopulated de·pop·u·late tr.v. de·pop·u·lat·ed, de·pop·u·lat·ing, de·pop·u·lates To reduce sharply the population of, as by disease, war, or forcible relocation. . The photographs that constitute the ongoing series "American Cities" are about as far away from the warm California sun as it gets. The depicted sites, typically bustling bus·tle 1 intr. & tr.v. bus·tled, bus·tling, bus·tles To move or cause to move energetically and busily. n. Excited and often noisy activity; a stir. , were evacuated e·vac·u·ate v. e·vac·u·at·ed, e·vac·u·at·ing, e·vac·u·ates v.tr. 1. a. To empty or remove the contents of. b. To create a vacuum in. 2. not by digital means but by Opie's dedication to shooting in the dead of night. Anyone who's experienced a major city at, say, dawn on a Sunday knows how tranquil yet exhilarating it can be to feel as if one has the entire place to oneself. Here, for the moment, the world is your oyster; you're at one with your environment. That sense of intimacy, experienced in a monumental context, can easily be projected onto Opie's pictures. No people? Not to worry--there's no trash either, or, it would seem, danger. Swept clean and aglow with cool, tender light, these cityscapes are safe as far as the eye can see. The illusion of freedom, however, is just that--an imaginative construct, tempered by everything we know about the city but aren't shown here. Five pictures of Wall Street were all taken less than a year before September 11, 2001. Inadvertently, Opie captured a New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of that no longer exists--right down to images of the once gleaming facade of the World Trade Center. The emptiness of the Financial District now conjures intimations of unseen horror. What's fascinating about Opie's pictures of deserted urban centers is their openness to such radically different associations. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] |
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