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Naked Youth.


Until recently, being an American admirer of the photographer Bill Henson was a lonely and rather painstaking chore. Apart from a small survey of his work at the Denver Art Museum The Denver Art Museum is an art museum in Denver, Colorado located in Denver's Civic Center. It is known for its collection of American Indian art, and has a comprehensive collection numbering more than 55,000 works from across the world.  in 1990 an a few photographs included in a 1984 Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum: see Guggenheim Museum.  exhibition of Australia art, he has been almost impossible to find in the Unite States, less unknown than antiknown--a sub-subcult figure even within circles devoted to contemporary photography. Given that his work has been a staple of the European art world since 1981 and that it occupied an entire pavilion at the 1995 Venice Biennale, Henson's invisibility is bizarre enough. But when you consider that his photographs of the '80s and '90s predict and arguably outclass out·class  
tr.v. out·classed, out·class·ing, out·class·es
To surpass decisively, so as to appear of a higher class.


outclass
Verb

to surpass (someone) in performance or quality
 much of the personal, edgy portraiture currently in fashion and ubiquitous in galleries, you have to wonder (or at least I do) whether Henson's effect on contemporary art isn't much larger than his reputation in the States reflects.

My own discovery of the forty-six-year-old Australian photographer was a weird stroke of luck. While house-sitting for art-critic friend in the late '80s, I fished a thin catalogue of Henson's work from the shelves of art books and gave it a scan. At that time, auteurish, confrontational photographers with a taste for the fucked up and taboo were near the center of the critical dialogue, as well as the hippest things going. Not only did the dozen or so images in Henson's catalogue hold their own against the work of better-know artists like Robert Mapplethorpe, Larry Clark, Nan Goldin, and Bernard Faucon in terms of their refined transgressiveness; but just as interestingly, their plush, cinematographic look and romantic, almost melodramatic tone had a radically old-fashioned gorgeousness that raised fascinating questions about the strengths and limitations of his contemporaries' lower-key, sketchier--or, in Mapplethorpe's case, serenely rigid--styles.

Just prior to the appearance of that catalogue, a permanent realignment re·a·lign  
tr.v. re·a·ligned, re·a·lign·ing, re·a·ligns
1. To put back into proper order or alignment.

2. To make new groupings of or working arrangements between.
 had taken place in Henson's work In the '70s and early '80s he was known for his black-and-white, mock-candid, quasi daguerreotype daguerreotype

First successful form of photography. It is named for Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre, who invented the technique in collaboration with Nicéphore Niépce.
 images of self-absorbed individuals lost in crowds or striking solitary expressive poses in gloom-shrouded voids. In the mid-'80s he began to produce color photographs focused almost exclusively on introverted in·tro·vert·ed
adj.
Marked by interest in or preoccupation with oneself or one's own thoughts as opposed to others or the environment.
, compellingly beautiful teenage outsiders and the abandoned buildings, vacant lots, and deserted back roads that formed their turf. The catalogue featured a then-fresh series of diptychs and triptychs that juxtaposed jux·ta·pose  
tr.v. jux·ta·posed, jux·ta·pos·ing, jux·ta·pos·es
To place side by side, especially for comparison or contrast.
 portraits of naked, dirt-smudged teens looking almost like coal miners with images depicting the interiors of palatial pa·la·tial  
adj.
1. Of or suitable for a palace: palatial furnishings.

2. Of the nature of a palace, as in spaciousness or ornateness: a palatial yacht.
 homes filled with antiques and old master-ish paintings. The teens appeared to be addicts, prostitutes, and runaways snapped at moments of intense self-mourning. Unlike the subjects in Clark's or Goldin's similarly populated work, Henson's figures were approached with such unreserved empathy and preserved with such an artfully impersonal, elegant visual luster that they became strangely interchangeable with their lavish architectural counterparts. The dichotomy between luxurious empty decors and undressed tormented characters was over the top, to be sure. Yet there was a purity of intention that turned these heavy-handed gestures into acts of moving, even desperate complicity, the way an opera's rigorously expelled emotion can turn its overstated o·ver·state  
tr.v. o·ver·stat·ed, o·ver·stat·ing, o·ver·states
To state in exaggerated terms. See Synonyms at exaggerate.



o
 musical phrasings into profound instruments.

The experience of being haunted by reproductions of contemporary artworks, with no real hope of comparing them to the originals, or investigating the work's context, or having even a small library of criticism against which to check one's opinions, constitutes an odd and not unpowerful dilemma--one that living in the art-importing center of the world normally prevents. In 1995, there was a rare Henson sighting in the form of another catalogue for the photographer's aforementioned Australian pavilion exhibit in Venice. By then, his work had phased into something more sexually explicit and emotionally diffuse. In place of the multipanel photographs from the '80s there were autonomous, single-frame images containing pictures, violently cut-up and then collaged, of young, pale, faceless bodies fucking, sometimes in large groups, in dark, apparently cavernous locales. It was as if the orgy in Antonioni's Zabriskie Point had gone on past the point of exhaustion and into some posterotic realm where sex was the only cure for unquenchable loneliness. Again, as in Henson's almost too blatant parallel between the superficial spoils of the privileged and the ruined internal lives of the young and disenfranchised, his aggressive cuts and reassemblages bordered dangerously on a dumbass, obvious way of signifying his subjects' interpersonal agonies; yet some depth of understanding and level of finesse at which the reproductions could only hint left an almost addictive longing to search out these pictures and deconstruct de·con·struct  
tr.v. de·con·struct·ed, de·con·struct·ing, de·con·structs
1. To break down into components; dismantle.

2.
 their effect.

Despite the Biennale The name Biennale is Italian and means "every other year", describing an event that happens every 2 years. One of the most important Biennales is an art exhibition that takes place for three months in Venice — the Venice Biennale — but there are numerous others:
 exposure, it would be another six years before I would see Henson's work in America. And by the time he had his long-delayed solo gallery show in 1999 at Karyn Lovegrove in Los Angeles, the experiments with collage and multipaneling had given way to large framed photographs that engaged even more unobtrusively with the psyches of his young subjects. In this recent work, boys and girls boys and girls

mercurialisannua.
 stand, sit, and lounge around alone or in seemingly romantic couplings, their averted faces revealing emotions so deep, mixed-up, and masked in achy casualness that one searches the photographs' compositions and patina for the aesthetic system that makes such intimacy possible. What becomes apparent when you see Henson's work in person is the importance of the almost pitch-black darkness that, in whatever formal context he has devised over the years, always cloaks his forlorn, defiantly unneedy subjects, giving their run-down urban environments the look of remote desert outposts. It's a black that seems both to be caked on the surface of the photographs, like tar or centuries of soot, and to recede re·cede 1  
intr.v. re·ced·ed, re·ced·ing, re·cedes
1. To move back or away from a limit, point, or mark: waited for the floodwaters to recede.

2.
 infinitely into the background. It looks as solid as lead, a physical threat to the teens it blankets, and at the same time it's as if the blackness were exuded by their bodies, forming a kind of paranormal paranormal,
adj 1. outside the realm of normal experience or scientific explanation.
n 2. collective term for anomalous phenomena.
 manifestation of some feeling too intense and guarded to register in any other fashion. In its own peculiar way, Henson's black is as unique an achievement as, say, Robert Ryman's white. It gives the similar impression of an idea refined to a point of such complexity that it can only be communicated through a suggestion of its absence. Were it not for Henson's primary, almost devotional need to elicit empathy for his troubled human subjects, there's a feeling that nothing would prevent that black from completely absorbing his attention and extinguishing the work.

Bill Henson's photography is far too reclusive re·clu·sive  
adj.
1. Seeking or preferring seclusion or isolation.

2. Providing seclusion: a reclusive hut.
 within the world of its own concerns to fit comfortably into the kinds of categories that make a writer's job easy. Characterizing it as a forebear fore·bear also for·bear  
n.
A person from whom one is descended; an ancestor. See Synonyms at ancestor.



[Middle English forbear : fore-, fore- + beer,
 of the new portraiture practiced by younger artists like Anna Gaskell, Tracey Moffatt, and Collier Schorr is helpful in distinguishing its more forceful, less attenuated Attenuated
Alive but weakened; an attenuated microorganism can no longer produce disease.

Mentioned in: Tuberculin Skin Test


attenuated

having undergone a process of attenuation.
 pursuit of emotional truth, just as viewing it in light of Henson's transgressive trans·gres·sive  
adj.
1. Exceeding a limit or boundary, especially of social acceptability.

2. Of or relating to a genre of fiction, filmmaking, or art characterized by graphic depictions of behavior that violates socially
 contemporaries' work puts a useful emphasis on the unabashed classicism classicism, a term that, when applied generally, means clearness, elegance, symmetry, and repose produced by attention to traditional forms. It is sometimes synonymous with excellence or artistic quality of high distinction.  and painterliness of his style. While these associations flatter him and create a reasonable introduction to his work, the map they form gives only the vaguest directions into the matter of Henson's achievement, which lies not so much in the twist he gives to the subject of disenfranchised youth but in the almost pretmodern beauty he conjures from such a familiar and clinically post-postmodern source.
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Title Annotation:Bill Henson
Author:Cooper, Dennis
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:8AUST
Date:Feb 1, 2002
Words:1218
Previous Article:February 1982. (Artforum).(Brief Article)
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