/ Dans sa dernière série, « Anamorphosis », Alvin Booth dissimule le corps nu en le démultipliant, donnant ainsi à sa nature concrète une dimension abstraite.Le corps étiré, tendu, tordu ou détaillé disparaît, perd son caractère charnel, et donne naissance à de nouvelles formes fantasques.Par une anamorphose d’image, ces explosions visuelles créent une dynamique d’un nouvel ordre, que l’on peut comparer au travaux d’Edward Muybridge. A l’inverse. Dans ces photographies, les nus disparaissent au fur et à mesure pour se métamorphoser sous l’effet kaléidoscopique en formes géométriques. Comme des tessellations d’Escher abstraites et surréalistes, vont naître des figures organiques végétales et érotiques.
« Finger Prints » explore la question des liens entre photographie et réalité. Dans notre culture saturée d’images, l’œil finit par ne plus voir. Alvin Booth, nous livre ici un travail photographique « à toucher » du bout des doigts, comparable au Braille. La vue donne souvent des envies aux autres sens, particulièrement à celui du toucher et parvient à recomposer une réalité mise en valeur par ces deux informations. Afin de mieux saisir cette intention voulue, Booth, nous invite à découvrir cette série de nus, le yeux fermés. Alvin Booth was born in Hull, an industrial city in the Northeast of England. He left school at the age of seventeen and trained to become a hairdresser. After working in Hull he later moved to Oxford where his interest in photography grew. In 1989 he gave up hairdressing and moved to New York City where he now lives.
Self taught, his nude studies are the work of both artist and artisan. Each photograph is printed, toned, and "distressed" by hand. So while the image and printing method is modern, the final result is reminiscent of the photographs of the mid to late nineteenth century.
The finished print is then framed by sealing it in glass with copper and solder Booth’s first book of nudes, Corpus (forward by Charlotte Cotton of the Victoria and Albert Museum) was published fall 1999 by Edition Stemmle. Corpus was awarded the Kodak Photo Book press award for 1999. His next book, Osmosis, is due for publication with Edition Stemmle fall 2002.
Booth’s work can be found in the collections of Elton John, Barbara Millstein of the Brooklyn Museum, Leon Constantiner, Henry Buhl, Adam and Eileen Boxer of Ubu Gallery amongst others. Here Alvin Booth shows us that we can still be surprised by both the photographic medium and by the human body. With “Fingerprints”, he offers us photographs that consent to being touched – we are provided with body Braille. Studies have shown that the visual cortex is activated when the blind read Braille with their fingertips. Here we can imagine the opposite – our sensory cortex being activated as we look at haptically enhanced images of nudes. The images suggest evolution’s next stage, coolly engineered epithelium as information. Booth asks us to contemplate his photographs with our eyes closed – a perverse request that we gladly grant. John W. Krakauer