Juul Hondius.GALERIE AKINCI The large color photographs in Juul Hondius's show "Faction" evoked topics in the news: illegal immigrants, asylum seekers, refugees, and civil war. At a time when winning entries for the World Press Photo competition are carefully composed and highly aesthetic, no matter how gruesome the subject matter, Hondius's glossy depictions of politically charged scenes can trigger a flash of (mis-)recognition. UN/Defender, 2000, shows a man in a white cape leaning in apparent exhaustion and despair against a Land Rover Defender The Land Rover Defender is a British four wheel drive Off-road utility vehicle. It is the product of continued development of the original utility Land Rover Series I launched in 1948. in a muddy field. Although the scene has been staged in Holland, the word Bosnia seems to be written all over it. The fact that the man looks a bit too well groomed only underlines the image's seductive power. If the man's gesture is rhetorical, this is precisely the visual rhetoric Visual rhetoric is the fairly recent development of a theoretical framework describing how visual images communicate, as opposed to aural or verbal messages. The study of visual rhetoric is different from that of visual or graphic design, in that it emphasizes images as rational of grief and despair--rooted in classical Western painting--that the media exploit. Some works suggest narrative connections: The man who is seen leaving a coach in Man#1, 1999, might be identified with the one making his way through a wood on the other side of a water in Crossing, 2000. The title reinforces the suggestion that he is illegally crossing a border. The bland title Auto, on the other hand, says nothing about the suggestive 1999 image of damp car windows through which some people are dimly seen, suggesting perhaps a drug deal or some other shady activity. The work appears to demand an explicit, narrative, newspaper-style caption. While this emphasizes that photographs function in the news media through the captions and articles that provide them with a clearcut meaning, it also points out that many images are already structured to generate their captions almost automatically. Highly coded and reminiscent of previous photographic and film images, such news photographs forge a seemingly natural link between visual and written rhetoric. The somewhat more ambiguous Bus, 2000, shows some black people dozing on a bus. The low perspective from across the aisle was achieved by shooting the photo in a bus that was sawed in two, yet this impossible perspective only serves to make the image more convincing and hence emphasizes its "reality effect." The sleepiness of the scene recalls David Goldblatt's dark black-and-white pictures of black South Africans This is a list of notable South Africans with Wikipedia articles. Academics, Medical and Scientists
adj. hill·i·er, hill·i·est 1. Having many hills. 2. Similar to a hill; steep. hill functioning citizenship is linked to car ownership and the bus is the domain of the poor and of ethnic minorities. Hondius's works wouldn't be so successful if he were merely trying to demonstrate, once again, that images can be deceptive and that the mass media are particularly deceitful. His main interest appears to he not the veracity veracity (v n of images but the development of a critical iconography iconography (ī'kŏnŏg`rəfē) [Gr.,=image-drawing] or iconology [Gr.,=image-study], in art history, the study and interpretation of figural representations, either individual or symbolic, religious or secular; of the present. Virtually all the pictures have to do with mobility and borders and related media subjects like smuggling smuggling, illegal transport across state or national boundaries of goods or persons liable to customs or to prohibition. Smuggling has been carried on in nearly all nations and has occasionally been adopted as an instrument of national policy, as by Great Britain , civil war, and illegal immigrants "penetrating" the borders of the nation-state. Although Hondius does address the photographic construction of naturalness through his canny can·ny adj. can·ni·er, can·ni·est 1. Careful and shrewd, especially where one's own interests are concerned. 2. Cautious in spending money; frugal. 3. Scots a. actualization actualization Psychiatry The realization of one's full potential of visual stereotypes, his overriding concern seems to be the way in which these cliched cli·chéd also cliched adj. Having become stale or commonplace through overuse; hackneyed: "In the States, it might seem a little clichéd; in Paris, it seems fresh and original" yet always new images form part of a contemporary iconography of mobility. His brilliant variations and condensations drive home the point that this iconography not only illustrates our globalized flows of people, commodities, and capital, but informs the fears and desires we invest in this state (or rather, this flux) of affairs. |
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