Geert Goiris: Zach Feuer Gallery (LFL).Almost all of the images in Belgian photographer Geert Goiris's first solo exhibition in 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 are extraordinary in some respect, but it is not immediately clear what else connects them. Some, such as his shot of an albino albino (ălbī`nō) [Port.,=white], animal or plant lacking normal pigmentation. The absence of pigment is observed in the body covering (skin, hair, and feathers) and in the iris of the eye. wallaby wallaby: see kangaroo. wallaby Any of about 25 species of medium-sized kangaroos, found chiefly in Australia. Brush wallabies (11 species) are built like the big kangaroos but differ in dentition. Rock wallabies live among rocks, usually near water. with delicately crossed paws and eyes narrowed as if against something painful, are gently otherworldly; others, such as the study of an explosion suspended in a cool, green glen, are more patently strange. Elsewhere there is unusual architecture and a deepfrozen sink with a pillar of ice rising beneath the faucet, an image more reminiscent of the surreal narratives staged by artists such as Gregory Crewdson Gregory Crewdson (born September 26 1962) is an American photographer who is best known for elaborately staged, surreal scenes of American homes and neighborhoods. Crewdson was born in Park Slope, a neighborhood in Brooklyn. and Anna Gaskell. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Such variety could be used to assert a sort of Gerhard Richter-like attitude toward one's subjects: All things can be photographed, therefore nothing is more important, artistically speaking, than anything else. But Goiris's atmosphere isn't charged with irony, only observation that, while sometimes detached, is nonetheless straightforward and sincere. His strategies have none of the needy cleverness so common in contemporary photography. He throws you back on the images, on uncomplicated compositions with the subject placed in the center and framed by judicious amounts of background and foreground space. Even Toijska, 2002, his unfathomable icy sink, does not seem to make any grand claims for the elusiveness of narrative, although an upturned plastic container marooned in the ice might easily echo Moby Dick Moby Dick pursued by Ahab and crew of Pequod. [Am. Lit.: Moby Dick] See : Quarry Moby Dick white whale pursued relentlessly by Captain Ahab; “It was the whiteness of the whale that above all things appalled me. or the Titanic. In essence it manages, like the fireball fireball, very bright meteor leaving a trail in the sky that can remain visible for several minutes; often a distinct sound, perhaps caused by very low frequency radio waves, is associated with it. and the wallaby, to be at once natural and strange. The result of Goiris's approach is a coolness of temperament and hue, an equivocal EQUIVOCAL. What has a double sense. 2. In the construction of contracts, it is a general rule that when an expression may be taken in two senses, that shall be preferred which gives it effect. Vide Ambiguity; Construction; Interpretation; and Dig. path between the everyday and the extraordinary. The exhibition's loosely unifying theme turns out to be human presence, sometimes gently overlaid on nature, sometimes more vigorously imposed. In the awkward and monumental architecture of Ministry of Transportation, 2003, which depicts the eponymous e·pon·y·mous adj. Of, relating to, or constituting an eponym. [From Greek ep numos; see eponym. building in a bleak rural setting that seems ready to rise up and reclaim its territory, this duality Duality (physics)The state of having two natures, which is often applied in physics. The classic example is wave-particle duality. The elementary constituents of nature—electrons, quarks, photons, gravitons, and so on—behave in some respects is characterized by sharp contrast. In Curonian, 2000, it insinuates itself more artfully, as a sheet of netting seems to disappear into the sere clearing behind it. In E 313, 1999, a towering pile of discarded red highway barriers becomes a landscape feature in its own right, on par with nature, although the movement of the trees next to the inert plastic suggests that nature is the less permanent of the two. The wallaby in Albino, 2003, seems to reside in a natural enough setting until you notice the closely cropped grass and bench. There is an appealing modesty to the way this idea shifts from one image to the next; it could easily feel preachy preach·y adj. preach·i·er, preach·i·est Inclined or given to tedious and excessive moralizing; didactic. preach , but is altogether more ambiguous. In a statement accompanying the exhibition, Goiris describes his work as "traumatic realism": photography as evidence of the rupture between two realities, a glimpse of something beyond the normal. Many of Goiris's works feel almost familiar, with their meaning contained in that "almost," and this may be why the least satisfying images in this set are those that depict actual humans instead of their traces. The resonance of human activity is more deeply felt in its absence, no matter how precarious (as in Standing on Ice, 2003) or ephemeral (as in 9 Minutes of Silence--Brussels, 2003) the evidence left behind. When it does feature bodies, his work begins to shape itself into something more self-consciously clever, crowding his gentle ambiguity out of the frame. |
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numos; see eponym.
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