Umělec 2010/1 >> B u l l s e y e = r e c o r d Просмотр всех номеров
B u l l s e y e   =   r e c o r d
Журнал Umělec
Год 2010, 1
6,50 EUR
7 USD
Послать печатную версию номера:
Получить подписку

B u l l s e y e = r e c o r d

Umělec 2010/1

01.01.2010

Palo Fabuš | en cs de

Is life a story with a climax in the form of retrospective and reconciliation, or can it be limited to a series of successes without a clear goal? Today, we approach our own biographies in the same way as we do literary stories; life becomes a record of life. 

Since 2002, Amsterdam’s KesselsKramer publishing house has published a series of books entitled In Almost Every Picture, featuring collections of vernacular photography. The most recent book in the series, Shooting Gallery, was published in 2008 and presents photographs from the collection of Ria van Dijk, who, between 1936 and 2008, photographed herself aiming a rifle at her camera’s shutter release. The chronologically ordered photographs show not only van Dijk aiming her air rifle, but also the random (?) spectators standing around her in anticipation of her hitting the bullseye, which she always managed to do at first attempt, even approaching old age. During her life, photographing became an everyday activity for van Dijk, interrupted only by the war and a stay in the hospital. 
Shooting Gallery offers a refreshing contribution to the undoubtedly popular genre of multi-year photographic series, a contribution that goes beyond the usual act of recording the aging self-portraitist. Although Ria van Dijk does not consider herself an artist, her photographs offer a simple – though for interpretation highly playful – approach that, without exaggeration, touches upon existential issues. What is more, it does so all the more urgently the more we escape from these issues into the whirlpool of funfair images and escapades. This series of photographs of an aging funfair shooter excels without any unnecessary emphasis on inspirational energy, the personal search for meaning, being until death, the random and significant, loneliness and society. Last but not least, worth noting from this amateur collection is its structured self-censorship at a time of hedonistic self-depiction, and the fact that the gaze of the bystanders is almost always on the target, not the person shooting.


In Almost Every Picture 7: Shooting Gallery. Collected and edited by Erik Kessels and Joep Eijkens. KesselsKramer 2008.





Комментарии

Статья не была прокомментирована

Добавить новый комментарий

Рекомендуемые статьи

Tunelling Culture II Tunelling Culture II
Wicked / Interview with Jim Hollands Wicked / Interview with Jim Hollands
“A person must shake someone’s hand three times while gazing intently into their eyes. That’s the key to memorizing their name with certainty. It is in this way that I’ve remembered the names of 5,000 people who have been to the Horse Hospital,” Jim Hollands told me. Hollands is an experimental filmmaker, musician and curator. In his childhood, he suffered through tough social situations and…
Terminator vs. Avatar: Notes on Accelerationism Terminator vs. Avatar: Notes on Accelerationism
Why political intellectuals, do you incline towards the proletariat? In commiseration for what? I realize that a proletarian would hate you, you have no hatred because you are bourgeois, privileged, smooth-skinned types, but also because you dare not say that the only important thing there is to say, that one can enjoy swallowing the shit of capital, its materials, its metal bars, its polystyrene…
Nick Land – An Experiment in Inhumanism Nick Land – An Experiment in Inhumanism
Nick Land was a British philosopher but is no longer, though he is not dead. The almost neurotic fervor with which he scratched at the scars of reality has seduced more than a few promising academics onto the path of art that offends in its originality. The texts that he has left behind are reliably revolting and boring, and impel us to castrate their categorization as “mere” literature.