Rineke Dijkstra: Marian Goodman Gallery.In the photographs that make up her second 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 solo gallery exhibition, Rineke Dijkstra Rineke Dijkstra (Sittard, 1959) is a Dutch photographer. Rineke Dijkstra attended the Rietveld Academie in Amsterdam from 1981 until 1986. She is best known for her beach portraits, in which she photographed the complexity of adolescents. keeps her eye trained on innocence as it gives way to experience. She brings us into proximity with two youthful subjects whom she has photographed periodically: Shaw, a teenager newly drafted into the Israeli military (who would later desert); and Olivier, who signed up with the French foreign legion Foreign Legion, French volunteer armed force composed chiefly, in its enlisted ranks, of foreigners. Its international character and the tradition of not revealing enlistees' backgrounds have helped to surround the Foreign Legion with an aura of mystery and romance. several years ago, as soon as he was old enough to do so. Dijkstra first shot Shaw, as she did many other young women, at the induction center in Tel Hashomer Tel HaShomer is an area in Gush Dan (Dan Region) in central Israel, located on the eastern side of Ramat Gan and bordered to the south by Qiryat Ono, to the west by Yehud, and to the north by the Ben Gurion International Airport. , Israel--not the sort of location, the photographer has commented to me, that afforded her the luxury of getting to know her subjects. But the pandemonium Pandemonium Milton’s capital of the devils. [Br. Lit.: Paradise Lost] See : Confusion Pandemonium chief city of Hell. [Br. Lit.: Paradise Lost] See : Hell of place is completely absent from the four-foot-high C-prints--no sense of urgency or tumult finds its way into the frame. If anything, the subject's disaffected waifishness and military garb qualify as the high-fashion look of the moment. As a result, Shany is oddly neither here nor there--she's not really a model, she's not exactly a soldier. She is, however, right at home within the continuum of Dijkstra's desire to arrest youth, to distill dis·till v. 1. To subject a substance to distillation. 2. To separate a distillate by distillation. 3. To increase the concentration of, separate, or purify a substance by distillation. and study it so that perhaps we might know it as we never could when we were in between things ourselves. Dijkstra has photographed Olivier since 2000, each time gaining access to him through the French foreign legion, a fighting force Fighting Force is a 1997 3D beat 'em up developed by Core Design and published by Eidos in the same lines of classics such as Streets of Rage and Double Dragon. ranked among the toughest and most highly trained in the world. How long would it take Olivier to grow into manhood once he joined up? How does this process manifest itself visually? Dijkstra took his picture at least once a year, recording the passage of time on his face and body, waiting for the soldier to emerge. Olivier appears to play it very close to the chest; and yet from one year to the next he continues to participate in Dijksrra's project. He gives no indication he's interested in revealing himself to her (or us)--but that's key to the payoff of the photographer's pictures. Her subjects reveal themselves to us in ways they could never anticipate. Dijkstra's "continuous subjects"--those with whom she has kept in touch and documented growing up--also include a Bosnian refugee named Almerisa, who's grown from a folkish folk·ish adj. 1. Of or characteristic of folk music, art, or literature. 2. Simple or natural; folksy: charmed us with his folkish wit and humor. girl from a war-torn country to a generic global citizen. (Photographs of Almerisa are on view in "Strangers," the International Center of Photography's first triennial tri·en·ni·al adj. 1. Occurring every third year. 2. Lasting three years. n. 1. A third anniversary. 2. A ceremony or celebration occurring every three years. .) In each instance--whether it be Shany, Olivier, or Almerisa--we're drawn into memories of our own familial experiences. (You see your brother's kids once a year and are struck not only by how much they've grown but by how dramatically visible those changes are.) Over time, with Dijkstra's repeated invitations to her subjects to step before her camera, virtual intimacies begin to accrue. For viewers, this has to do with the vulnerability of her young subjects and with the artist, whose pictures always make us inquire beyond the frame. We imagine her ability to take us into military offices and induction centers and facilities for refugees--and that leads us right back to the invisible quotient of place in these pictures. As a result, however momentarily, we are led to consider the fragility of youth against the backdrop of the wars we wage against one another. |
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