Uta Barth
5 May 2005 - 18 Jun 2005
Tanya Bonakdar Gallery is very pleased to present an exhibition of new
works by Uta Barth. Over the past 15 years, Barth’s work has
repeatedly refused to address a central subject, presenting us instead
with out-of-focus backgrounds, peripheral views and passing glimpses of
scenes seen only in passing. The content of her work has always been
that of vision itself and her often empty images point us back to our
perceptual experience as the primary point of engagement. More recent
projects (nowhere near (1999), and ….and of time.(2000)) present us
with a single view of looking out the artist’s living-room window, a
subject so familiar to her, that it becomes almost invisible again,
creating a blind-spot in daily experience. This familiar, ambient
visual environment is presented in countless repetition and all we can
notice is the passage of time and changing color of light. The 2002
installation of a project titled white blind/bright red, narrows the
view out her window and focuses only on barren tree branches isolated
against a glaring white sky. This project again addresses the nature of
vision, but a much slower vision this time; one that is mostly fixed
and staring into bright light. The project traces the optical phenomena
produced by this type of looking. Sequenced images drift from positive
to negative frames, as they reproduce the fleeting bright colors of
optical afterimages, the blinding white of visual overexposure, optical
fatigue and the fading visual memory of what is seen with eyes wide
open, as well as eyes wide shut.
This latest body of work (Untitled, 2005) is the first project to
reintroduce a central subject back into her images. And it is a rather
culturally and historically loaded one at that, as these are pictures
of flowers placed on a single desk in her home. They are photographed
over a period of many months, whenever she thought to place some there,
perhaps as a reminder or marker that begs one to slow down vision in
midst of the speed and chaos of daily work. They are not arranged and
composed as a still-life might be, instead the camera frames them at
awkward angles, much like a glimpse in passing or a long slow stare
while seated across the room. On one hand, these images are quite banal
and truly without affect, rendering whatever happens to be there
(flowers set in some jar, some keys or a paperclip left on the desk,
wilting petals left on its surface). On the other hand they are images,
which trace pure light steaming in from behind, in every scene. And
mostly they render time. They are slow and give us a prolonged
engagement with the act of looking, purely for it’s own sake. The
exhibitions presents us with pictures of various scale, some as
diptychs and triptychs, which are occasionally interrupted by bright
red optical afterimages and that bright flash of color we see, as we
close and rest our eyes, if only for a moment.
Uta Barth’s work has been exhibited widely by museums, including the
Whitney Museum of American Art, MoMA, New York, the Guggenheim Museum,
New York and Bilbao, the Tate Modern, London, MOCA, Los Angeles, the
MCA Chicago, LACMA, Los Angeles, the Getty Museum, the Wexner Center
and many others. A mid-career survey of her work was presented by the
Henry Art Gallery in Seattle and the MCA in Houston. A smaller survey
of recent projects will close at SITE Santa Fe this month. An
installation of white blind/bright red is part of the exhibition, 'Out
There: Landscape in the New Millenium,' at the Cleveland Museum Art, to
open later this month.
Books on the artist's work include:
2004 Uta Barth. Contemporary Artist Series, London: Phaidon
Press,Essays by Uta Barth Pamela Lee and Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe,
interview with Matthew Higgs, and selected writings by Joan Didion.
2004 Uta Barth. white blind (bright red). SITE Santa Fe, 2004. Essay by
Jan Tumlir.
2002 Barth, Uta. ...and of time. Artist book, 2000. Essay by Timothy
Martin. Published in conjunction with a project commissioned by the J.
Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, for the exhibition Departures: 11
Artists, at the Getty, 2000.
2000 Uta Barth – In Between Places. Seattle: Henry Art Gallery and DAP
Press, 2000. Essays by Sheryl Conkelton, Timothy Martin, and Russell
Ferguson.
1999 Barth, Uta. nowhere near. Artist book, 1999. Essay by Jan Tumlir.
Published in conjunction with a three-part exhibition project by the
same name, at ACME., Los Angeles; Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York; and
Andréhn-Schiptjenko, Stockholm,
1995 Smith, Elizabeth A.T. At the Edge of the Decipherable: Recent
Photographs by Uta Barth. Los Angeles: Museum of Contemporary Art and
RAM Publications, 1995 (1st edition). Saint Ann’s Press, 2000 (2nd
edition).