In his large-format photographs, the American artist Jay Mark Johnson (born 1955) presents sequences of movement. In a process developed by the artist himself, he employs a specially modified camera, which records but a narrow vertical plane in front of the camera lens. While the images retain a spatial dimension in their vertical axis, the horizontal axis is dedicated to a depiction of the passage of time. The camera thus produces an image flowing evenly from left to right. Although the picture is created digitally, it is not digitally manipulated. Rather it is a true indexical recording of a concrete movement. Johnson's photographs become a series of "action paintings" revealing the progressive patterns of the gestures and movements themselves. The hybrid combination of spatial and temporal dimensions creates images that not only pique our curiosity but also question our habitual mechanisms of perception. Although Johnson's images allude to art historical precursors - above all the chronophotographic studies of movement of the late 19th century (Eadweard Muybridge, Étienne Jules Marey, Albert Londe et al.), as well as the works of Italian Futurism - he goes beyond these in methodology and sheer visual impact.
In his new exhibition "Swept Away" Johnson focuses on images created in Belgrade in February 2008. The images were taken in freezing conditions with overcast winter skies from roadsides, from scenic overlooks and within a few local flea markets and junk markets, and depict prozessions of cars or trams as well as the lone figures of junk or scrap metal collectors and the like. According to Johnson, the title of the show was inspired by the socially critical film by Lina Wertmüller, which examines the gradual reversal of the hierarchical positions between a rich northern Italian lady and a simple southern Italian deck hand when they are stranded on an uninhabited island. But the title is much more multifaceted: it also refers to the obliterated landscapes behind the vehicles and figures, an image maybe of the destruction of nature by the relentless encroachment of industry, as well as to the desolate social isolation of the depicted figures, who move on the fringes of society and are commonly excluded from the collective awareness. Lastly it can also be read, particularly in view of the inclusion of the element of time in Johnson's images, as a compelling visual reflection on the nature of time itself as a destructive maelstrom that washes away all that is but transient.
J.M. Johnson was educated at the Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies and has worked as an assistant to Peter Eisenman, as well as for Rem Koolhaas and Aldo Rossi. Works of his are in the permanent collections of the MOMA in New York, the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., the Art Institute of Chicago, as well as the Collection Frederick R. Weisman and the Langen Foundation, Hombroich. Johnson's varied and prolific career spans theatre and performance art, photography, live musical performance, and journalism. He co-founded three different alternative television collectives first in Manhattan, and then in Mexico and El Salvador during the eighties at the height of political repression and unrest in those countries. After his return from Latin America he started working in the movie industry and is now a film director with broad experience in visual effects production, having supervised, directed or otherwise contributed to the computer generated imagery for nearly a dozen major studio films and television series, such as Outbreak, Matrix, Titanic, Tank Girl, Moulin Rouge, White Oleander, and music videos for the Red Hot Chili Peppers and others. Jay Mark Johnson lives and works in Los Angeles, USA.
DIEHL starts its “Flaneur” selection with 42 works of the Soviet photo journalist Dmitry Baltermants. Best known for his pictures of the Soviet battlefield during World War II.
During World War II, Baltermants covered major battles for Izvestia and for the Red Army newspaper Na Razgrom Vraga. He fought and photographe...
Le 24 mars 1976, le peuple argentin subit un coup d’état militaire. C’est le début d’une ère de répression sanglante, où quelque 30 000 personnes disparaissent et près de 500 bébés sont volés. Mais s’ouvre également une période d’ultralibéralisme d&ea...
Blindspot Gallery is pleased to present Coastline featuring emerging Chinese photographer Zhang Xiao’s award-winning series Coastline that focuses on the continuous 18,000 kilometres of China’s coastline. The series does not merely capture the seaside landscape of these coastal areas, but also witnesses the changes o...
Du dépouillement des clichés de Catherine Lambermont se dégage une poésie narrative. Ses images composent une suite d’instants d’observation libre. Son travail réhabilite le continuum qui caractérise chaque frontière. La frontière est le lieu du lien. Entre le corps et l’es...
Eric Rondepierre a choisi de montrer au sein d'un travail multiforme, certaines des oeuvres qui ont partie liée au cinéma, depuis ses débuts en 1992. Sur un parcours de vingt ans, 56 pièces ont été prélevées dans dix séries : Excédents, Annonces, Précis...
Simone Nieweg is a photographer of gardens and landscapes. Her work, as it has manifested itself over the past thirty years, knows no other interest. At the same time, a certain serenity hovers over her pictures. In them, nature seems entirely focused on itself. One immediately notices that human beings are absent. The allure of colors and shapes...
« Je ne peux m’empêcher, atteste Gérard Uféras, d’associer la pratique de l’Art à la notion d’amour et de partage ». (extrait de son livre Etats de grâce, éditions du Fantom)
«Egyptian pack» evokes many associations - here are both Petersburgers favorite topic of werewolves (see the movie of E. Yufit «Corpsmen werewolves») and references to the Perm animal style.
Also we can recall British film «The Wicker Man» (1973) with its ritual procession of the man-beasts, ho...