2016-10-11

Exhibition dates: 16th May – 30th October 2016

The best fun I had with this posting was putting together the first twelve images. They seem to act as ‘strange attractors’, a feeling recognised by the curators of the exhibition if you view the first installation photograph by Anders Jones, below.

Marcus

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Many thankx to photographer Anders Jones and the Duggal website for allowing me to publish the installation photographs in the posting. See their posting about the exhibition.

Artists have always turned to dreams as a source of inspiration, a retreat from reason, and a space for exploring imagination and desire. In the history of photography, dreams have been most closely associated with the Surrealists, who pushed the technical limits of the medium to transform the camera’s realist documents into fantastical compositions. Whereas their modernist explorations were often bound to psychoanalytic theories, more recently contemporary photographers have pursued the world of sleep and dreams through increasingly open-ended works that succeed through evocation rather than description.

This exhibition takes a cue from the artists it features by displaying a constellation of photographs that collectively evoke the experience of a waking dream. Here, a night sky composed of pills, a fragmented rainbow, a sleeping fairy-tale princess, and an alien underwater landscape illuminate hidden impulses and longings underlying contemporary life. Drawn entirely from The Met collection, Dream States features approximately 30 photographs and video works primarily from the 1970s to the present.

Text from the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Anselm Kiefer (German, born Donaueschingen, 1945)
Brünnhilde Sleeps

1980

Acrylic and gouache on photograph

23 x 32 7/8in. (58.4 x 83.5cm)

Denise and Andrew Saul Fund, 1995

© Anselm Kiefer

Near the end of Wagner’s second opera of the Ring Cycle, Die Walküre (The Valkyrie), the Valkyrie Brünnhilde, having attempted to help the sibling lovers Siegmund and Sieglinde against their father’s wishes, is punished for her betrayal. Wotan puts her to sleep and surrounds her with a ring of fire (she will be awakened in turn by her nephew Siegfried, the incestuous son of Siegmund and Sieglinde, in the third opera of the cycle).

Kiefer portrays the dormant Brünnhilde as French actress Catherine Deneuve in François Truffaut’s film Mississippi Mermaid, using a photograph he snapped in a movie house in 1969. In the film, Deneuve plays a deceitful mail-order bride who comes to the island of Réunion to marry a plantation owner, played by Jean-Paul Belmondo. Aside from the parallels of love and betrayal in both the Ring Cycle and Truffaut’s film, Kiefer thought the choice of Deneuve for Brünnhilde both ironic and amusing: she was for him “the contrary of Brünnhilde. Very slim, very French, very cool, very sexy,” hinting that no man would go through fire to obtain Wagner’s corpulent, armored Valkyrie.

Manuel Alvarez Bravo (Mexican, 1902-2002)
La Buena Fama Durmiendo (The Good Reputation Sleeping)

1939, printed c. 1970s

Gelatin silver print

Mat: 16 × 20 in. (40.6 × 50.8 cm)

The Elisha Whittelsey Collection, The Elisha Whittelsey Fund, 1973

Eugène Atget (French, Libourne 1857-1927 Paris)
Versailles

1924-25

Salted paper print from glass negative

Image: 17.5 x 21.9 cm (6 7/8 x 8 5/8 in.)

Sheet: 18 × 21.9 cm (7 1/16 × 8 5/8 in.)

Mat: 16 × 20 in. (40.6 × 50.8 cm)

Gilman Collection, Purchase, Ann Tenenbaum and Thomas H. Lee Gift, 2005

From 1898 until his death in 1927, Atget exhaustively documented the remains of Old Paris: the city’s streets, monuments, interiors, and environs. Among the last entries in this self-directed preservationist effort was a series of images of landscapes and sculpture in the parks of Saint-Cloud and Versailles. Here, the photographer records a statue of a sleeping Ariadne, the mythical Cretan princess abandoned by her lover Theseus on the island of Naxos. Atget’s simultaneously realistic and otherworldly photographs inspired the Surrealist artist Man Ray, who reproduced four of them in a 1926 issue of the journal La Révolution Surréaliste, thus presenting the elder photographer as a modernist forerunner.

Robert Frank (American, born Zurich, 1924)
Fourth of July, Coney Island

1958

Gelatin silver print

Image: 26 x 35.6 cm (10 1/4 x 14 in.)

Mat: 18 1/2 × 22 1/2 in. (47 × 57.2 cm)

Purchase, Alfred Stieglitz Society Gifts, 2002

© 2005 Robert Frank

As he traveled around the country in 1955-56 making the photographs that would constitute his landmark book, The Americans, Frank’s impression of America changed radically. He found less of the freedom and tolerance imagined by postwar Europeans, and more alienation and racial prejudice simmering beneath the happy surface. His disillusionment is poignantly embodied in this image of a disheveled African-American man disengaged from the crowd and asleep in a fetal position amid the debris of an Independence Day celebration on Coney Island.

This was one of the last still photographs Frank made before he devoted his creative energy to filmmaking in the early 1960s. As such, it may be interpreted as an elegy to still photography; the lone figure functions as a surrogate for Frank himself, as he turned his back on Life – like photojournalism to concentrate on the more personal, dreamlike imagery of his films.

Shannon Bool (Canadian, born 1972)
Vertigo

2015

Gelatin silver print

Image: 7 13/16 × 11 13/16 in. (19.8 × 30 cm)

Gift of Shannon Bool and Daniel Faria Gallery, 2015

© Shannon Bool

This photogram – made without a camera by placing a collage of transparencies on a photosensitive sheet of paper and exposing it to light – is part of a series portraying psychoanalysts and their patients. Here, a patient on a Freudian couch is seen from above; the figure, sheathed in patterns of Maori origin, appears to come apart at the seams under the analyst’s scrutiny.

Nan Goldin (American, born Washington, D.C., 1953)
French Chris on the Convertible, NYC

1979

Silver dye bleach print

50.8 x 61cm (20 x 24in.)

Mat: 25 × 32 in. (63.5 × 81.3 cm)

Purchase, The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation Gift, through Joyce and Robert Menschel, 2001

© Nan Goldin Courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery

Following in the tradition of Robert Frank and Helen Levitt, Goldin is her generation’s greatest practitioner of the “snapshot aesthetic” in photography-the intimate, diaristic mode that yields images that, in the right hands, are both spontaneous and carefully seen, tossed off and irreducibly right. In this early work, the artist has captured her friend as a Chatterton of the Lower East Side, lying across the back of a blue convertible with shirt open, eyes closed, and an empty can of Schaeffer beer by his side instead of arsenic – a contemporary vision of glamorous surrender for our own time.

Arthur Tress (American, born 1940)
Boy in Flood Dream, Ocean City, New Jersey

1972

Gelatin silver print

Mat: 18 × 18 in. (45.7 × 45.7 cm)

Gift of the artist, 1973

In the late 1960s, Tress began audio-recording children recounting their dreams and nightmares. He then collaborated with the young people, who acted out their tales for the camera, and published the resulting surreal images in the 1972 book The Dream Collector. Many of the children shared common nightmare scenarios such as falling, drowning, and being trapped, chased by monsters, or humiliated in the classroom. Here, a young boy clings to the roof of a home that has washed ashore as if after a flood. The desolate landscape evokes the sort of non-place characteristic of dreams and conveys feelings of loneliness and abandonment.

Installation view of the exhibition Dream States: Contemporary Photography and Video at the Metropolitan Museum of Art featuring at lower right, Nan Goldin’s French Chris on the Convertible, NYC (1979)
Photo by Anders Jones

Sophie Calle (French, born Paris, 1953)
Gloria K., first sleeper. Anne B., second sleeper

1979

Gelatin silver prints

12.6 x 18.4cm (4 15/16 x 7 1/4in.) Mat: 14 × 17 in. (35.6 × 43.2 cm)

Gift of the artist and Olivier Renaud-Clement, in memory of Gilles Dusein, 2000

© Sophie Calle

Sophie Calle (French, born Paris, 1953)
Gloria K., first sleeper. Anne B., second sleeper

1979

Gelatin silver prints

12.6 x 18.4cm (4 15/16 x 7 1/4in.) Mat: 14 × 17 in. (35.6 × 43.2 cm)

Gift of the artist and Olivier Renaud-Clement, in memory of Gilles Dusein, 2000

© Sophie Calle

While obviously indebted to the deadpan photo-text combinations of Conceptualism, Calle’s art is as purely French at its core as the novels of Marguerite Duras and the films of Alain Resnais – an intimate exploration of memory, desire, and obsessive longing. The artist’s primary method involves a perfectly calibrated interplay between narrative and image, both of which steadily approach their object of desire only to find another blind spot-that which can never be captured through language or representation.

This work is the first segment of Calle’s first work, The Sleepers (1979), in which the artist invited twenty-nine friends and acquaintances to sleep in her bed consecutively between April 1 and April 9, during which time she photographed them once an hour and kept notes recording each encounter. All the elements of Calle’s art-from the voyeuristic inversion of the private sphere (rituals of the bedroom) and the public (the book or gallery wall) to the use of serial, repetitive structures-are present here in embryonic form.

Paul Graham (British, born 1956)
Senami, Christchurch, New Zealand

2011

Chromogenic print

Image: 44 1/4 in. × 59 in. (112.4 × 149.9 cm)

Purchase, Vital Projects Fund Inc. Gift, through Joyce and Robert Menschel and Hideyuki Osawa Gift, 2015

Graham’s series, Does Yellow Run Forever?, juxtaposes three groups of photographs: rainbows arcing over the Irish countryside, the facades of pawn-and-jewelry shops in New York, and tender studies of his partner asleep. The thematic links between the images (the rainbow’s mythical pot of gold, the sparkling objects in the Harlem window display, and a sleeping dreamer) may seem obvious, even pat, but Graham’s photographs transmute those clichés into a constellation of deep feeling. These luminous vignettes evoke a sense of longing and pathos, the quest for something permanent amid the illusory and devalued.

Peter Hujar (American, Trenton, New Jersey 1934-1987 New York)
Girl in My Hallway

1976

Gelatin silver print

Image: 37 x 37.1 cm (14 9/16 x 14 5/8 in.)

Mat: 25 × 25 in. (63.5 × 63.5 cm)

Purchase, Alfred Stieglitz Society Gifts, 2006

© The Peter Hujar Archive, L.L.C.

Brassaï (French (born Romania), Brașov 1899-1984 Côte d’Azur)
A Vagrant Sleeping in Marseille

1935, printed 1940s

Gelatin silver print

17.2 x 23.3cm (6 3/4 x 9 3/16in.)

Mat: 17 × 14 in. (43.2 × 35.6 cm)

Gift of the artist, 1980

Photograph by Brassaï. Copyright © Gilberte Brassaï

The inevitable suggestion that the homeless, hungry man sprawled on the sidewalk might be dreaming of a finely dressed and improbably large salad links Brassaï’s photograph to the work of the Surrealists. Although he frequently depicted thugs, vagrants, and prostitutes, he did so without judgment or political motive; his were pictures meant to delight or perplex the eye and mind-not to prompt a social crusade.

Installation view of the exhibition Dream States: Contemporary Photography and Video at the Metropolitan Museum of Art featuring at left, Paul Graham’s Gold Town Jewellery, East Harlem, New York (2012) and at right, Paul Graham’s Senami, Christchurch, New Zealand (2011), both from the series Does Yellow Run Forever?
Photo by Anders Jones

“The psychological fluidity of the medium has been noted before by the Met. In 1993, to celebrate its purchase of the Gilman Collection, the curator Maria Morris Hambourg chose to call her exhibition The Waking Dream. The title came from Keats’s “Ode to a Nightingale” and suggested, in Hambourg’s words, “the haunting power of photographs to commingle past and present, to suspend the world and the artist’s experience of it in unique distillations.”

Conceptual latitude can benefit curators, giving them plenty of room to maneuver in making their selections, or it can be a detriment if a loose framework has so many sides that it won’t support an argument.

Dream States suffers from the latter, even though the leeway of the title allows splendid pictures in disparate styles to be displayed together. Organized by associate curator Mia Fineman and assistant curator Beth Saunders around a theme that isn’t notably pertinent or provocative, the show has no discernible reason for being. It isn’t stocked with recent purchases – fewer than ten of the works entered the collection in this decade – and it isn’t tightly edited. To quality for inclusion here a photograph need only depict someone lying down or with eyes closed. A “dream state” seems to be loosely defined. It can be as a starry or cloudless sky; a tree-less landscape; inverted or abstract imagery; or something blurry.”

Richard B. Woodward. “Dream States: Contemporary Photography and Video @Met,” on the Collector Daily website July 11, 2016 [Online] Cited 06/10/2016

Jack Goldstein (American, born Canada, 1945-2003)
The Pull

1976

Chromogenic prints

Frame: 76.2 x 101.6 cm (30 x 40 in.) each

Purchase, The Buddy Taub Foundation Gift and Vital Projects Fund Inc. Gift, through Joyce and Robert Menschel, 2009

© The Estate of Jack Goldstein

Born in the postwar baby boom, Goldstein grew up surrounded by the products of the rapidly expanding media culture-movies, television, newspapers, magazines, and advertisements of all kinds. Young artists such as Goldstein went on to be educated in the rigorous and reductive principles of Minimal and Conceptual art during the 1970s but knew from personal experience that images shape our sense of the world and who we are, rather than vice versa; they made their art reflect that secondhand relationship to reality.

In this early work, Goldstein has lifted, or “appropriated,” images of a deep sea diver, a falling figure, and a spaceman from unknown printed sources-isolating them from their original contexts and setting them at a very small scale against monochromatic backgrounds (green for sea, blue for sky, and white for space), as if the viewer were seeing them from a great distance. Because the viewer is unlikely to have seen such figures firsthand, that distance is not merely spatial but also epistemological in nature-the images trigger memories based not on original encounters but on reproductions of experience. The Pull – Goldstein’s only photographic work in a career that spanned painting, performance, film, and sound recordings – was included in “Pictures,” a seminal 1977 exhibition at Artist’s Space in New York, which also introduced the public to other young artists making use of appropriation, such as Sherrie Levine, Robert Longo, and Troy Brauntuch.

Sarah Anne Johnson (Canadian, born 1976)
Glitter Bomb

2012

Chromogenic print with glitter and acrylic paint

Sheet: 29 7/8 in. × 53 in. (75.9 × 134.6 cm)

Purchase, Funds from Various Donors in memory of Randie Malinsky, 2016

© Sarah Anne Johnson

Johnson works primarily with photography but also employs a variety of other media – sculpted figurines, dioramas, paint, ink, and bursts of glitter – to amplify the emotional power of her images. Glitter Bomb belongs to a series exploring the bacchanalian culture of summer music festivals. At once ominous and ecstatic, the image evokes the blissed-out mind-set of young revelers taking part in a modern-day rite of passage.

Oliver Wasow (American, born 1960)
Float

1984-2008, printed 2009

Inkjet prints

Frame: 17.3 x 22.3 cm (6 13/16 x 8 3/4 in.)

Overall: 116.8 x 152.4 cm (46 x 60 in.)

Purchase, Vital Projects Fund Inc. Gift, through Joyce and Robert Menschel, 2010

© Oliver Wasow

Wasow has a long-standing fascination with science fiction, apocalyptic fantasies, and documentation of unidentified flying objects. In his many pictures of mysterious floating disks and orbs, the artist courts doubt by running found images through a battery of processes, including drawing, photocopying, and superimposition, to create distortions. The resulting photographs play with the human propensity to invest form with meaning, offering just enough detail to spur the imagination.

Fred Tomaselli (American, born Santa Monica, California, 1956)
Portrait of Laura

2015

Gelatin silver print with graphite

Image: 16 in. × 19 15/16 in. (40.6 × 50.6 cm)

Mat: 24 3/4 × 25 3/4 in. (62.9 × 65.4 cm)

Purchase, Vital Projects Fund Inc. Gift, through Joyce and Robert Menschel, 2016

© Fred Tomaselli

This “portrait” of the artist’s wife, Laura, belongs to an ongoing series he calls “chemical celestial portraits of inner and outer space.” Tomaselli creates likenesses based on each sitter’s astrological sign and the star map for his or her date of birth. Placing sugar and pills on photographic paper and exposing it to light, he produces a photogram of the corresponding constellation and names the stars after the various drugs the subject remembers consuming, from cold medicine to cocaine. The result is an unconventional map of identity that cleverly weds the mystical and the pharmacological.

Bea Nettles (American, born Gainesville, Florida, 1946)
Mountain Dream Tarot: A Deck of 78 Photographic Cards

1975

Photographically illustrated tarot cards

Purchase, Dorothy Levitt Beskind Gift, 1977

The idea to create a set of photographic tarot cards came to Nettles in a dream during the summer of 1970, while she was on an artist’s residency in the mountains of North Carolina. She subsequently reinterpreted the ancient symbolism of the traditional tarot deck, enlisting friends and family members as models for photographs that she augmented with hand-painted additions. In 2007 the image Nettles created for the Three of Swords card was used as the disc graphic for Bruce Springsteen’s album Magic.

Installation view of the exhibition Dream States: Contemporary Photography and Video at the Metropolitan Museum of Art featuring Bea Nettles’ Mountain Dream Tarot: A Deck of 78 Photographic Cards (1975)
Photo by Anders Jones

“Artists often turn to dreams as a source of inspiration, a retreat from reason, and a space for exploring imagination and desire. In the history of photography, dream imagery has been most closely associated with the Surrealists, who used experimental techniques to bridge the gap between the camera’s objectivity and the internal gaze of the mind’s eye. While those modernist explorations were often bound to psychoanalytic theories, other photographers have pursued the world of sleep and dreams through deliberately open-ended works that succeed through evocation rather than description. The exhibition Dream States: Contemporary Photographs and Video presents 30 photographs and one video drawn from The Met collection, all loosely tied to the subjective yet universal experience of dreaming. The exhibition is on view at the Museum from May 16 through October 30, 2016.

Many of the works take the surrender of sleep as their subject matter. In photographs by Robert Frank, Danny Lyon, and Nan Goldin, recumbent figures appear vulnerable to the wandering gaze of onlookers, yet their inner worlds remain out of reach. Images of bodies floating and falling conjure the tumultuous world of dreams, and landscapes are made strange through the camera’s selective vision. Highlights include photographs by Paul Graham from his recent series Does Yellow Run Forever (2014); images from Sophie Calle’s earliest body of work, The Sleepers (1979), in which she invited friends and acquaintances to sleep in her own bed while she watched; and Anselm Kiefer’s Brünnhilde Sleeps (1980), a hand-painted photograph featuring French actress Catherine Deneuve recast as a Wagnerian Valkyrie. Also featured are recently acquired works by Shannon Bool, Sarah Anne Johnson, Jim Shaw, and Fred Tomaselli.

Dream States: Contemporary Photographs and Video is organized by Mia Fineman, Associate Curator; and Beth Saunders, Curatorial Assistant in the Department of Photographs at The Metropolitan Museum of Art.”

Text from the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Grete Stern (Argentinian, born Germany, 1904-1999)
Sueño No. 1: “Articulos eléctricos para el hogar” (Dream No. 1: “Electrical Household items”)

c. 1950

Gelatin silver print

Image: 26.6 x 22.9 cm (10 1/2 x 9 in.)

Frame: 63.5 x 76.2 cm (25 x 30 in.)

Twentieth-Century Photography Fund, 2012

In 1948 the Argentine women’s magazine Idilio introduced a weekly column called “Psychoanalysis Will Help You,” which invited readers to submit their dreams for analysis. Each week, one dream was illustrated with a photomontage by Stern, a Bauhaus-trained photographer and graphic designer who fled Berlin for Buenos Aires when the Nazis came to power. Over three years, Stern created 140 photomontages for the magazine, translating the unconscious fears and desires of its predominantly female readership into clever, compelling images. Here, a masculine hand swoops in to “turn on” a lamp whose base is a tiny, elegantly dressed woman. Rarely has female objectification been so erotically and electrically charged.

Adam Fuss (British, born 1961)

From the series “My Ghost”

1999

Gelatin silver print

184.9 x 123.3 cm (72 13/16 x 48 9/16 in.)

Purchase, The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation Gift, through Joyce and Robert Menschel, 2000

© Adam Fuss

With his large-scale photograms, Fuss has breathed new life into the cameraless technique that became the hallmark of modernist photographers such as Man Ray and László Moholy-Nagy in the 1920s. He created this image by blowing thick clouds of smoke over a sheet of photographic paper and exposing it to a quick flash of light. Evoking the wizardry of a medieval alchemist, Fuss fixes a permanent image of evanescence.

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Filed under: American, american photographers, beauty, black and white photography, colour photography, digital photography, exhibition, existence, gallery website, intimacy, landscape, light, memory, New York, photographic series, photography, portrait, psychological, quotation, space, street photography, surrealism, time, works on paper Tagged: "Electrical Household items", A Vagrant Sleeping in Marseille, Adam Fuss My Ghost, American photography, Anselm Kiefer, Anselm Kiefer Brünnhilde Sleeps, Ariadne, Arthur Tress, Arthur Tress Boy in Flood Dream, Arthur Tress The Dream Collector, Articulos eléctricos para el hogar, Bauhaus, Bauhaus-trained photographer, Bea Nettles, Bea Nettles Mountain Dream Tarot, black and white photography, Boy in Flood Dream, Brassaï A Vagrant Sleeping in Marseille, Brassai, Brünnhilde Sleeps, Catherine Deneuve, Chatterton of the Lower East Side, children dreams and nightmares, children recounting their dreams and nightmares, collage of transparencies, Conceptual Art, Coney Island, Does Yellow Run Forever?, dream images, Dream No. 1, dream psychology in images, Dream States, Dream States: Contemporary Photographs and Video, dreams, Eugène Atget Versailles, Eugene Atget, evanescence, Float, Fourth of July Coney Island, François Truffaut, François Truffaut Mississippi Mermaid, Fred Tomaselli, Fred Tomaselli Portrait of Laura, French Chris on the Convertible, French photography, Girl in My Hallway, Glitter Bomb, Gloria K. first sleeper, Gloria K. first sleeper Anne B. second sleeper, Grete Stern, Grete Stern Articulos eléctricos para el hogar, Grete Stern Dream No. 1, Grete Stern Electrical Household items, Grete Stern Sueño No. 1, Idilio, Jack Goldstein, Jack Goldstein The Pull, La buena fama durmiendo, La Révolution surréaliste, large-scale photograms, manuel alvarez bravo, Manuel Alvarez Bravo La buena fama durmiendo, Manuel Alvarez Bravo The Good Reputation Sleeping, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Mexican photography, Minimal and Conceptual art, Mississippi Mermaid, Mountain Dream Tarot, Mountain Dream Tarot: A Deck of 78 Photographic Cards, nan goldin, Nan Goldin French Chris on the Convertible, Old Paris, Oliver Wasow, Oliver Wasow Float, Paul Graham, Paul Graham Does Yellow Run Forever?, Paul Graham Senami Christchurch, Paul Graham Senami Christchurch New Zealand, permanent image of evanescence, Peter Hujar, Peter Hujar Girl in My Hallway, photogram, photomontage, Pictures Artist's Space, Portrait of Laura, Psychoanalysis Will Help You, psychoanalysts and their patients, Robert Frank, Robert Frank Fourth of July Coney Island, Robert Frank The Americans, Sarah Anne Johnson, Sarah Anne Johnson Glitter Bomb, Senami Christchurch, Senami Christchurch New Zealand, Shannon Bool, Shannon Bool Vertigo, Siegmund and Sieglinde, snapshot aesthetic, Sophie Calle, Sophie Calle Gloria K. first sleeper, Sophie Calle The Sleepers, statue of a sleeping Ariadne, Sueño No. 1, the americans, The Dream Collector, The Good Reputation Sleeping, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Pull, The Sleepers, Versailles, Vertigo, women's magazine Idilio

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