Sally Mann "Upon Reflection"

Edwynn Houk Gallery

poster for Sally Mann "Upon Reflection"

This event has ended.

Edwynn Houk Gallery, in cooperation with Gagosian Gallery, is pleased to announce an exhibition of new photographic self-portraits by Sally Mann. Most people know Sally Mann as one of the most influential and important photographers working today, but what is far less known is the fact that Sally Mann is also an avid and successful equestrian. On her farm in Lexington, Virginia, Mann fills her pastures with Arabians, a breed known for their spiritedness, loyalty, and for their unyielding courage, a combination of character traits which are essential for endurance riding, Mann’s chosen sport.

But most recently, it was her relationship with horses, and with one horse-related event in particular, that gave birth to this newest series. On August 11, 2006, we received the following email from Sally Mann: "I had a real smash-up on Saturday...my stallion, cantering along way up in the mountains, suddenly staggered, reared back and fell over on me. I was knocked out but my friends say in his struggles to get up, he pummeled my back with his (newly shod that morning, *sigh*) hooves, bouncing me like a ragdoll...anyway, I came to consciousness in time to see him come crashing down next to me, dying. Terrible, indescribable.

Walked delirious 4 miles off the mountain and have been flat on my back for 6 days—Damaged everything, ribs, sternum, vertebrae, and black and blue from my eyes to my knees. The doctor who came out said, "You're going to hurt like crap for a long time" and so far he's been right. Sad about the horse, too. I was really crazy about him. Probably an aneurysm killed him.

Anyway, if ever I can get vertical and move my arms, beyond typing that is, I will try some printing..."

That was an optimistic sentiment; it was many months more of recovery and limited activity, a torment for a prolific artist. But Sally Mann found she could take pictures of herself without having to haul the camera around, finding a trove of material within the confines of her own face "Self-Portraits" and her own damaged torso "Omphalos." Mann has continued, now long after her recovery, to make more then 200 new ambrotypes since the accident in 2006. And characteristic of Sally Mann, the artist has created a new technique for this project which is based on 19th century processes but that incorporates a modern sensibility. Each unique image is captured as a wet-plate positive on a large, black glass plate and then is joined with others in groupings of 3, 9, 20, and even up to 75 plates.

For the very first time, the works from the "Omphalos" series will be on display. In this series, the focus is on the artist’s torso. Akin to the faces, the process is the same, but the grids of "Omphalos" examine more abstract, sculptural forms. The plates themselves have been treated as such: chiseled, scratched and smoothed until flesh becomes stone. Clearly a departure from one of the earliest and most timeless motifs in art, "Omphalos" is a title not only referring to the torso, but also to the symbolic continuation of the themes explored in Mann’s previous work: fertility, family, and heredity, recorded in the human form and in the land.

Media

Schedule

from September 13, 2012 to November 03, 2012

Reception For The Artist on 2012-09-13 from 18:00 to 20:00

Artist(s)

Sally Mann

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