“Tautira Tahiti”, 2010 Pigment ink on cotton paper 108 x 144 cm Edition 7 + 2 AP © Guy Tillim
Kuckei + Kuckei Linienstr. 158 10115 Berlin Allemagne
In his new series, Second Nature, Guy Tillim explores the ambivalence of the image and the memory in our contemplation of images. The first part of these works arose on and around the islands of French Polynesia. On his travels, he follows in the tracks of explorers such as James Cook and artists such as Paul Gauguin in his desire to gain a contemporary view of this “paradise”. And in the process, he occupies himself with questions regarding the independence of the motif and the role played by the beholder. How much of ourselves do we invest in an image? Where lie the boundaries between interpretation and documentation? Tillim's motifs range from expansive seascapes and brief moments of everyday life on the islands to the wild nature found in the interior jungle. But he strictly avoids giving his works a specific interpretive slant. People viewing his pictures will search in vain for visual categories such as romantic scenes, touristy snapshots and sentimentally transfigured images. Even so, his landscape shots are gripping: with their rich colours, powerful lights and vividness. Another characteristic feature of his landscapes is their infinite sharpness and incredible attention to detail. In his works, Tillim consciously renders visible the dynamic elements of nature – such as rain showers and fierce winds – and, in so doing, opposes a static-iconic conception of photography.
“Hanaiapa, Hiva Oa”, 2011 Pigment ink on cotton paper 108 x 144 cm Edition 7 + 2 AP © Guy Tillim
The second part of his work, which arose in São Paolo, serves as an antithesis to his illustrations of nature. On closer inspection, however, it is evident that here, too, Tillim adheres to his principle of treating oving and the motionless objects equally. Yet in the topography of the vast city, this pictorial strategy irritates the observer in an incomparably shorter space of time. The façades of the high-rise buildings, the parking cars, the forests of traffic signs and the passers-by hurrying past are captured with identical sharpness. By manipulating the digital image in this way, Tillim refuses to subject his motifs to a hierarchy, and the moment of being assumes the same importance as the moment of seeing. His São Paolo works reveal even more powerfully his striving to experience the place where he happens to be and to take in his environment. In his Second Nature series, he plays with expectations, pictorial content and mediation strategies. Sometimes he entices and surprises people who are contemplating his pictures. But he often unsettles them, too, because his images do not fulfill their expectations.
Guy Tillim was born in Johannesburg in 1962 and lives in Cape Town, South Africa. His previous series Avenue Patrice Lumumba has been shown at the Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson in Paris, the Museu Serralves in Porto, the Peabody Museum at Harvard University, Cambridge, the Foam Fotografiemuseum in Amsterdam, the Kunstverein Oldenburg, the Museum of Contemporary Photography in Chicago and the Contact Photofestival in Toronto. Guy Tillim's work has received a number of prizes, including the Daimler Chrysler Award for South African photography (2004), the Leica Oscar Barnack Award (2005) and the first Robert Gardener Fellowship in Photography at the Peabody Museum in Harvard (2006). His works have been exhibited at the Documenta 12 (2007), the São Paulo Bienal (2006) and the Triennale at the Palais de Tokyo (2012). Current exhibitions include the Prix Pictet Power at the Saatchi Gallery in London (10 October – 28 October 2012), Lost Places – Sites of Photography at the Hamburger Kunsthalle (8 June – September 2012), Appropriated Landscapes in the Walther Collection, Neu Ulm (16 June 2011 – March 2013), Auf Augenhöhe – Meisterwerke aus Mittelalter und Moderne in Ulm Museum (4 May 2012 – 6 January 2013), and Wir sind die Anderen - We are the Others in the Art Foyer DZ Bank, Frankfurt, (16 August – 27 October 2012)
“Avenida Paulista”, 2011 Pigment ink on cotton paper 108 x 144 cm Edition 7 + 2 AP © Guy Tillim
Photos et vignette © Guy Tillim