Springtime on Stage: a portfolio by Thomas Scheibitz.As almost any artist will tell you, one of the most important qualities of a studio is its light, and the best kind (at least for those in our hemisphere) comes through north-facing windows. Northern light is desirable because it illuminates the space throughout the entire day and changes hour by hour as the sun glides westward, altering the impression of works as they are being made. I mention this by way of introduction, because Thomas Scheibitz's studio on Boxhagenerstrasse in Berlin has large north-facing windows, and, judging from the photographs he has taken there--seven of which are published for the first time in a new portfolio for Artforum--Scheibitz spends a lot of time snapping his shutter (1) An opaque window that is moved in one direction to let light in and in another to close off the light. In fixed-lens cameras, one shutter often suffices for aperture and speed. as the light shifts and bends across his paintings and sculptures over the course of the day. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The history of artists photographing their work in the studio is both long and rich--and peppered with motivations as various as its practitioners. For most, the impetus is purely documentary: The photos provide a record of the fleeting state of a work-in-progress before it vanishes beneath new layers of paint or changes sculptural form. But some deploy the camera more strategically, using photographs to proscribe pro·scribe tr.v. pro·scribed, pro·scrib·ing, pro·scribes 1. To denounce or condemn. 2. To prohibit; forbid. See Synonyms at forbid. 3. a. To banish or outlaw (a person). viewing positions or installation conditions for their work. (Indeed, the photographic career of Scheibitz's contemporary and friend, Thomas Demand Thomas Demand (born 1964 in Munich, Germany) is a German photographer. He currently lives and works in Berlin. Education
Using 35mm reversal film to yield prints identical in size to the reproductions here, Scheibitz has thus far made four suites of photographs that self-consciously explore his paintings and sculptures in ways available only to the camera--and only in the studio. With their fragmentary frag·men·tar·y adj. Consisting of small, disconnected parts: a picture that emerges from fragmentary information. frag vistas, tight cropping, varying depths of field, and, in one case, double exposure, the images in his most recent portfolio, Springtime on Stage, 2005, contrast greatly with the "gestaltist Ge·stalt·ist n. An adherent or a practitioner of the principles of Gestalt psychology. " manner in which one typically encounters his art in a quasi-clinical gallery setting. Even though Scheibitz considers this work ancillary to his other studio practice, it is engaged with similar formal concerns. Indeed, the shifting perspectives, rigid yet playful geometry, and compositional rhyming all bear the artist's unmistakable pictorial signature. Although these images appear inspired by the changing light of his studio, Scheibitz's photographs rely as much on artful art·ful adj. 1. Exhibiting art or skill: "The furniture is an artful blend of antiques and reproductions" Michael W. Robbins. 2. choreography as on happenstance hap·pen·stance n. A chance circumstance: "Marriage loomed only as an outgrowth of happenstance; you met a person" Bruce Weber. . This point is perhaps most clearly evidenced in the plate opposite this text, which depicts three paintings set in a round aperture An orifice. It often refers to an opening in which light is allowed to pass in optical systems such as cameras and lasers. See f-stop and numerical aperture. . The image initially suggests a stolen peek through a peephole into Scheibitz's studio, but this illusion quickly gives way to another reading of the disk as mirror, and we realize we are only seeing a reflection of what the artist would have us see. Through such intimate glimpses of Scheibitz's world, he allows us, too, to see his art in another light. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion