
Marry Me
Autoportrait by The Artist
18" x 24"
Edition of 5
2008 |

Marry Me
Autoportrait by The Artist
18" x 24"
Edition of 5
2008 |

Marry Me
Autoportrait by The Artist
18" x 24"
Edition of 5
2008 |
Marry Me
Autoportrait by The Artist
18" x 24"
Edition of 5
2008 |

Marry Me
Autoportrait by The Artist
18" x 24"
Edition of 5
2008
|
Marry Me
Autoportrait by The Artist
18" x 24"
Edition of 5
2008
|
Marry Me
Autoportrait by The Artist
18" x 24"
Edition of 5
2008
|

"Silencio"(Close up)
Autoportrait by The Artist
18" x 24"
Edition of 5
2007 |

"silencio" (Kiss)
Autoportrait by The Artist
18" x 24"
Edition of 5
2007 |

"Candidate"
24" x 36 "
2008
|

"Candidate"
24" x 36 "
2008 |

Candidate and Spouse
(Teddy and Adora) |
About the Photographs
The photos in the exhibition of the artist in a performance situation (in this case a wedding dress) in public spaces, began with the desire to take performance to a so-called ‘intervention’ level in public urban spaces, to provoke response when possible , and to document the event when merited.
The photos were shot by the artist with a tripod mounted camera and a time lapse of several seconds to enter the frame.
The artist wanted not only to take his performance situations to a non art public, but also as an interactive performer, to try to catalyze a moment where public space, social interaction and a collective mood could be caught and saved
One of the reasons to take the work to the street is a desire to move beyond art -world -only performance events: the contemporary art community sometimes seems like a world apart; Here the purpose has been to try to in some way bridge back to the world ; to bring contemporary art to the non-involved public, and to report back to the ‘Art World’ a bit of what s going out there beyond the museums and galleries
As an admirer of much of the work of photographer Jeff Wall, the artist has wanted to create events and images that tell a story of shared space and social interaction.
But whereas Wall’s photos are impeccably staged to the last detail, in this case the frame is set up more as a stage set where several takes may or may not document an archiv-able event where the everyday environment is inhabited by a figure who represents a slightly unexpected situation; And that encountering a familiar situation out of context, or an individual slightly out of sync with the expectable, can encourage people to examine assumptions about the spatial and social environment more closely.
The reality of the street, of the neighborhood, of the ATM machine and the parking lot is the context of our time, it is the way we live; the public spaces we create and inhabit are the defining context of our culture. So for this artist working in these types of spaces, trying to create a spontaneous ‘momenttary event’ in these spaces, and with the people who inhabit them, is a performance art goal.
Alongside the concern for a vital relational event that may reveal aspects of the assumptions we live under now, the concern for spatial composition and the way we construct and inhabit them is also a concern.
Our urban spaces are in at least some cases, no less telling than those constructed by Giorgione, Hopper and Bacon, all of whom mirrored the complex spaces of their times and inhabited them with figures and interactive (or revealingly non-interactive) situations).
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