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SHARON
HARPER: FLUG (FLIGHT)
Dates: December 6, 2001 January 26, 2002
Opening Reception: Thursday December 6, 57 pm
Marcel Sitcoske Gallery is proud to present the first West Coast
exhibition of work by New York based photographer Sharon Harper.
This show coincides with The Whitney Museum of American Art's exhibition
First Exposure: Sharon Harper - Photographs from the Floating World.
This is also Harper's first one-person gallery exhibition.
Taken from the window of a high-speed train while traveling through
Germany, France, and Italy, and printed on matte paper, these black
and white photographs have the moody and atmospheric quality of
charcoal drawings. The deep blacks and luscious grays of these works
give them a richness seldom seen in this medium. Instead of capturing
an objective, static image of the landscape, Harper presents a fluid,
often blurred scene, as hills drift into sky, trees into roads,
reminiscent of our experience of traveling through the landscape.
Some images border on abstraction while others mix recognizable
elements with hazy forms. In Germany.i, clouds peek out from behind
a dark, blurred form, which reveals itself to be trees, while a
small group of houses is visible through an opening. The subject
here is not just the houses or even the entire landscape, but moreover
the experience of glimpsing this scene.
In this way, Harper redefines the traditional role of photography
as simply a way to record the way things look. She expands this
role to include our experience of what is being photographed. To
this end, these works function as external and internal landscapes
at the same time. For Harper, the journey or "Flight"
is both a way to see and experience the landscape as well as an
opportunity to peer into interior spaces. These works show a struggle
and search for resolution as images form out of chaos, clarity follows
confusion. As Stuart Horodner, the curator of Harper's exhibition
at the Goethe-Institut, writes in his essay on her work: "Her
landscapes are dense abstractions and porous representations; difficult
to grasp and likely to change, disperse or retreat into the unique
combination of darkness and light from which they came." It
is this flux and elusiveness which makes Sharon Harper's photographs
so complex and rewarding to behold.
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