Untitled #11 ©Sharon Core
Expositions du 26/3/2016 au 7/5/2016 Terminé
Yancey Richardson Gallery 535 West 22nd Street 10011 New York États-Unis
Yancey Richardson Gallery 535 West 22nd Street 10011 New York États-Unis
The Yancey Richardson Gallery is pleased to present Understory, an exhibition of new photographs by Sharon Core exploring the theater of growth, decay and predation in a cultivated closed landscape environment created by the artist.
The stage for these works is a large geodesic dome constructed by Core on her property in the Hudson Valley. The environment serves not only as a vivarium for plant, reptile, amphibian and insect life, but also as a living studio – one containing an elaborate staging of the conceit of art as the mirror of nature.
In her earlier series of still lifes Early American and 1606 – 1907, Core examined the play between photographic truth and painted illusion. In Understory she looks beyond the frame, outward and downward into the environment itself. Teeming with shrubs, vines, weeds, exotic and native cultivars along with decomposing wood, mosses, insects, snails and creatures collected from Core’s adjoining forest, the dome provides a platform on which Core acts as curator, constructing a landscape simultaneously natural and artificial. The botanical elements such as the fig tree, datura, passiflora and opium poppy, go beyond the decorative, selected instead for their biblical references and psychotropic properties that allude to their inherent power to expand consciousness.
Referencing the Sottobosco work of 17th century Dutch painter Otto Marseus van Schriek, in which the complications and significances of the natural world “under the woods” evolved into its own intricate genre, Core’s new photographs investigate the micro specifications of this partially engineered world not necessarily seen at first glance. Rejecting the use of faux vegetation, taxidermy and cinematic devices to create the fictional narratives often seen in recent 20th and 21st century photography, Core’s process of picture-making maintains a deep interaction with the materials and subjects she photographs and an insistence of authenticity. Her work is not a fiction, but an extension of what could be viewed beyond the actual frame, allowing the viewer to be immersed in its “understory”.
Untitled #3 ©Sharon Core |