Robert McCurdy "Photographs"

Venetia Kapernekas Gallery

poster for Robert McCurdy "Photographs"

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The show introduces seven photographs as superficial studies of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century genre of Dutch flower painting. The original Dutch paintings are in-and-of-themselves impossible pictures; the temporal lifespan of plucked flowers far exceeds the time required to paint them. Thus the scenes depict a moment that never really existed – they create a false reality. The scenes arrangements created with the help of a third-generation Dutch florist, Remco Van Vliet, and a fabricator from the American Museum of Natural History, Lindsay Foehrenbach, who created the small creatures – the snails, frogs, lizards etc. The scenes were then wired into place; in doing this, McCurdy has created a moment that is not natural, one that places the centerpiece in an airless environment. Juxtaposing the flowers against the cavernous black backgrounds, he harkens to the later styles of minimalism and proto-minimalism in which the object is the experience and the center of attention. The ephemeral nature of the photograph then places the viewer as the link between the past and the present.

In McCurdy’s previous show at the gallery, Landscapes 2007, he presented scenes of proto-cinematic landscapes imbued with a terrestrial presentness. Small objects perform as surrogates, stand-ins for a melodramatic or romanticized reality that lies somewhere between Casper David Friedrich and Hitchcock. Concurrently McCurdy has been working on a series of Portraits depicting notable personalities such as His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Toni Morrison, and Nelson Mandela. Each painting utilizes much the same process. He says “During the [portrait] sitting, I look for a sustainable moment; one where there is no before or after. It is why there is no movement, expression or gesture…The image is reported rather than interpreted.”

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Schedule

from February 26, 2009 to April 17, 2009

Artist(s)

Robert McCurdy

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