Auto Focus by Susan Bright - Excerpt
Auto Focus by Susan Bright - Excerpt
Auto Focus by Susan Bright - Excerpt
1 p2
colour High Res
AUTO FOCUS
THE SELF-PORTRAIT
IN CONTEMPORARY
PHOTOGRAPHY
SUSAN BRIGHT
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
First edition
www.monacellipress.com
CONTENTS
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
First edition
www.monacellipress.com
‘In retrospect, I have actually noticed that I reached for the camera
more readily when I was unhappy. I worked the pain into a beautiful
object that could be looked at detached from myself, and this consoled
me a little. In a way it’s banal, but it is as if art legitimates grief. I think
in this way a lot of artists make indecent use of their own unhappy lives
as material for their art.’
56 AUTOBIOGRAPHY BROTHERUS 57
‘In retrospect, I have actually noticed that I reached for the camera
more readily when I was unhappy. I worked the pain into a beautiful
object that could be looked at detached from myself, and this consoled
me a little. In a way it’s banal, but it is as if art legitimates grief. I think
in this way a lot of artists make indecent use of their own unhappy lives
as material for their art.’
56 AUTOBIOGRAPHY BROTHERUS 57
ZHANGHUAN
‘The body is the only direct way
through which I can know society
and society comes to know me.
The body is the proof of identity.
The body is language.’
64 BODY
ZHANGHUAN
‘The body is the only direct way
through which I can know society
and society comes to know me.
The body is the proof of identity.
The body is language.’
64 BODY
GAÜECA
In the series Me, Myself and I (2002–04), Spanish artist Gaüeca
mocks the hierarchies and clichés of art history and the
commercial art market. He assumes the roles of people
involved in the often elitist and snobbish art world, including
artists, curators, dealers and collectors. The photographs
serve as a comment on the subtle manners and behaviour
that can seem extraordinarily bewildering to those on the
outside of that environment. The project reveals the
insecurities that thrive in the unstable world of taste and
fashion, and which often dominate the business side of art,
commodifying the work and turning it into a cultural
product. When Gaüeca places text within some of the images,
it reads like the thought bubbles of narcissistic and
complacent characters who wish to reinvent themselves in
order to fit in; ‘Nobody Knows I Am Working Class’ one image
reveals, while another divulges ‘Nobody Knows My Dad Died
Yesterday’. In a complex layering of identity Gaüeca is
pretending to be a person who is in turn pretending to be
somebody else, and through this multitude of identities he
asks who places value upon artistic creation and why. In
terms of style and composition, the portraits are elegant and
meticulously crafted, and Gaüeca mimics the visual language
of advertising as well as famous works of art, from
seventeenth-century paintings by Dutch artist Jan Vermeer
to contemporary works by Bruce Nauman. He uses deadpan
humour to shatter the aura that surrounds the making and
selling of fine art, and manages to sidestep childish mockery
due to his intimate knowledge of the conventions and codes
of art history and the art world.
Opposite top: Nanna Saarhelo, Sleep with Me, Tuomo K (detail), 2007.
Opposite bottom: Nanna Saarhelo, Sleep with Me, Pihla (detail), 2007.
Opposite top: Nanna Saarhelo, Sleep with Me, Tuomo K (detail), 2007.
Opposite bottom: Nanna Saarhelo, Sleep with Me, Pihla (detail), 2007.