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Lisa Oppenheim: Galerie Juliette Jongma.


In Lisa Oppenheim's show "Parallax parallax (pâr`əlăks), any alteration in the relative apparent positions of objects produced by a shift in the position of the observer. In astronomy the term is used for several techniques for determining distance.  View" there was a constant tension between easily readable images and those that are utterly indecipherable and entropic. The gallery's back room contained photographs from the series "Upside-Down Portraits" (all works 2005), consisting of images printed directly from daguerreotypes in the US Library of Congress. The enlarged black-and-white prints of these oxidized oxidized

having been modified by the process of oxidation.


oxidized cellulose
see absorbable cellulose.
, scratched, and generally degraded daguerreotypes are informe surfaces that can no longer be related to titles such as Unidentified Elderly Woman with Cap--all the more so since they are upside down. There is a similar but more complex and subtle shift from figuration fig·u·ra·tion  
n.
1. The act of forming something into a particular shape.

2. A shape, form, or outline.

3. The act of representing with figures.

4. A figurative representation.

5.
 to abstraction in the two works from the "Autochromes" series, which consists of large reproductions of early color photographs that have become almost undifferentiated monochrome surfaces. However, the motifs still show through every so slightly--in one case a painting of Jesus, in the other a still life.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The gallery's front room contained Story Study Print, which consists of two 16-mm film projections. On backgrounds of various colors, the projection on the left shows lines from two radical alphabet posters from the '70s, "The Black ABC's" and "The Alternative Alphabet for Big and Little People." Thus we read, for example, that "A is for Afro," "B is for Beauty," "F is for Freedom," "V is for Vote," "X is for extra-special," and "Y is for Yoga." The projection on the right only repeats the letter in question, both in capitals and lowercase, while "illustrating" the concept in question with film footage. For instance, a range of beauty products accompanies the letter B. Because the projections are out of sync, linguistic and visual representation rarely coincide; thus, while the letter B is explained on the left, the right projection could be showing the letter O and film footage of a dinosaur sculpture. (O is for old, in case you were wondering.)

As this example shows, Oppenheim's selection of images is often whimsical; in combination with the lack of synchronicity synchronicity (singˈ·kr  of the two projections, which forces one to try and recollect rec·ol·lect  
v. rec·ol·lect·ed, rec·ol·lect·ing, rec·ol·lects

v.tr.
To recall to mind. See Synonyms at remember.

v.intr.
To remember something; have a recollection.
 what word a given letter stood for, the choice of imagery undercuts the didacticism of the original posters. Sometimes she goes for slightly predictable jokes: A fridge is made to represent "C is for Cool." But there are also more intriguing montages of concept and image (a medieval castle accompanies "D is for Dream," while a public housing project with satellite dishes accompanies "H is for Home") that were probably not exactly what the creators of the poster had in mind, and in a subtle shift between 1970 and the present, "K is for Kids" is visualized by ultracontemporary, hyperactive hy·per·ac·tive
adj.
1. Highly or excessively active, as a gland.

2. Having behavior characterized by constant overactivity.

3. Afflicted with attention deficit disorder.
 kids lip-synching to music in a park.

Oppenheim's work could be seen as critical dialogue with various attempts to make art legible by subjecting it to a linguistic model--from Panofskyan iconology i·co·nol·o·gy  
n.
The branch of art history that deals with the description, analysis, and interpretation of icons or iconic representations.



i·con
 to the Conceptual art conceptual art

Any of various art forms in which the idea for a work of art is considered more important than the finished product. The theory was explored by Marcel Duchamp from c. 1910, but the term was coined in the late 1950s by Edward Kienholz.
 of the era from which the alphabet posters stem. Sometimes, especially in the "Upside-Down Portraits," Oppenheim's own attempts to sabotage the reduction of visibility to readability is itself all too instantly decodable. However, the transformations inflicted on learning materials in Story Study Print show that Oppenheim is aware of--and distrustful dis·trust·ful  
adj.
Feeling or showing doubt.



dis·trustful·ly adv.

dis·trust
 of--the didactic element in her own practice.
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Author:Lutticken, Sven
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1CANA
Date:Dec 1, 2005
Words:532
Previous Article:Gert Robijns: Z33.
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