VisuallArt i

Simon Starling, lnvontar-Nr. 8573 (Man Ray)

‘IT'S ABOUT THE DEEPER POSSIBILITIES OF CREATING ART'

Under the lens

David Pollock talks to Simon Baker, curator of an exhibition exploring the

defamiliarising effect of the close-up ‘I think you can probably see this exhibition on

two levels.‘ says Simon Baker. co-curator of Close-Up. a new show exploring the history of

close-up photography. ‘There's the obvious and rather marvellous aspect suggested by the scenes before us. which involves actually working out what it is you're looking at. In many cases we can't do that when. for example. we see a series of hexagonal forms and realise its the surface of a lIy‘s eye.~

He continues: ‘Beyond that. the show looks at the way artists. photographers and filmmakers have been influenced by the close-up image in making their work. So it‘s about the deeper possibilities of creating art. as well as the viewer's enjoyment of looking at an image and having to figure out what it is.‘

Pieced together by Baker. a lecturer in art history at the University of Nottingham. and Professor Dawn Ades from the University of Iissex. Close-Up features examples dating back to the mid-19th century. Baker says he finds himself particularly drawn to the alien quality of close-up images when he sees them. ‘These pieces stand out from others made at the same period. and suggest links to one another that’s one thing you‘ll see in the shoW. that works with no causal similarity and lengthy periods of time between their creations will echo one another very obviously.‘

It was shortly after the principles of photographic science were discovered that close-up photography entered regular usage. ‘Almost as soon as (Louis) Daguerre in France and (William) Fox-Talbot in Britain developed their processes they were able to make images of things from very close up.‘ says

Baker. ‘At first it was the concept of seeing things intimately that was attractive to people. and not the idea that these views of the world were so strange. As far as there being a vogue for close—up photography at any point in history goes. I would say the l‘)2()s and 30s were the biggest period in this respect. Certainly. the well—known photographers in the exhibition Brassai. Man Ray. Alfred Renger—I’at/sch - became into the idea of these games you could play. to throw people off what it was they were looking at.‘

Baker cites a famous photograph by Man Ray. contained in the exhibition. entitled 'l)ust Breeding'. It's a shot of Marcel Duchamp‘s work large (ilass~ which is often referred to as 'View from an Aeroplane‘. encouraging viewers to think of it as an aerial shot. “That game with confusions of scale is very current in maga/ines of the 20s and 30s. this encouragement of wonderful mistakes.‘

More recently. photographic artists have been inclined to create hard to identify close-ups of their own or others’ bodies. which Barker says can be both disturbing and alienating. He also comes back to the referential theme by including works by Simon Starling. which use an electron microscope to take huge close-ups of an old Man Ray photograph. magnifying the subject to such an extent that they actually show the silver inside the image. In such a way. the show lays bare photographic art as a process of imagination layered with technical innovation.

Close-Up, Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh, Fri 24 Oct-Sun 1 1 Jan.

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’% Sister Corita: Power Up This rare exhibition of work by the radical 60$ poster-maker and Roman Catholic nun displays 15 of her bright, brash but not unSOphisticated text— based silk-screened posters. See review. page 96. Dundee Contemporary Arts Print Room, until Tue 4 Nov.

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*5 Ruth Claxton: Postcards Claxton's second solo show at the lngleby explores the relationships between figures within pictures and between the subject and the viewer by manipulating reproductions of historical portraits. See picture caption. page 97. lngleby Gallery, Edinburgh, until Wed 79 Nov.

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