Archive for the 'Photography' Category Page 2 of 2



Gregory Crewdson

Gregory Crewdson’s latest exhbition, Beneath the Roses, seems to be everywhere at the moment. Showing at Luhring Augustine until May 3, and at White Cube, and will open at Gagosian May 3, 2008. This latest series continues familiar Crewdson themes; mundane settings collide with a subverted narrative that captures a moment of potential mystery, unease. It’s the viewer who brings the narrative to the image. Interpretation unfolds as you realize something really awful just took place, or could occur, within moments.

Untitled (The Madison)
‘Beneath the Roses’
2007
Edition of 6
Archival pigment print
58 1/2 x 89 1/2 in. (148.6 x 227.3 cm) (incl. frame)

Light has everything to do with Crewdson’s sublime imagery. Dusk bathes an image with an otherness, suspended between day and night. Smoke clouds our perception and hints at more drama laying just beyond what is easily seen in the image.

Gregory Crewdson
Untitled, Summer 2004
Digital C-print
(north by northwest from Beneath the Roses)
64 1/4 X 94 1/4 inches

Cars drift in and out of the images. A door is flung open, or left abandoned.

Untitled (Forest Clearing)
‘Beneath the Roses’
2007
Archival pigment print
58 1/2 x 89 1/2 in. (148.6 x 227.3 cm) (incl. frame)

Intimate. Detached. Horrible. Beautiful. For me, the work is about uncovering contrasts.

How does he do it? There’s a great story online at Aperture that describes his crew, which includes members Rick Sands, Daniel Karp, Carl Sprague and others, and gives insight into their working capacity with Crewdson. Each crew member discusses his or her specialties and contribution to Crewdson’s vision. The scale of Crewdson’s endeavor takes on new meaning while reading this article; you realize the number of people required and the amount of equipment needed to stage a photo.

White Cube has a series of Production Stills available for purchase.

Official artist website here.

Sam Taylor-Wood, Looking Out

This is my favorite Sam Taylor-Wood image. The photograph titled, Looking Out, features Thandie Newton as a solitary figure sitting in the picture gallery at Althorp House, ancestral home to the Spencers and final resting place of Diana, Princess of Wales. Taylor-Wood says she wanted someone who was achingly beautiful within an achingly beautiful environment.

Sam Taylor-Wood
Looking Out (2002)
Hand printed c-type colour photograph
Edition of 200
50 x 60 cm (20 x 24 in)
Signed, dated and numbered on the front

Taylor-Wood is represented by White Cube, London.

Petrina Hicks – Lauren

Not a new image, however I like it so much I thought I’d post it. The artist is Petrina Hicks, from Stills Gallery. I first saw this image in The Corner Shop, Sydney. According to the Stills site, Lauren (eyes shut) is sold out but they still have prints available for Lauren (eyes open).

Petrina Hicks
Lauren, 2003
from Lauren
Lightjet print

Stills Gallery
36 Gosbell Street
Paddington NSW 2021