Maverick
Arts
Bostons Visual Artsletter |
By Charles Giuliano
82 Webster Street
East Boston, 02128
Charles.Giuliano@verizon.net
Copyright C 2002,
Charles Giuliano |
Issue Number
85
November 27, 2002
Charles Giuliano is a Boston based artist, curator and critic.
He is an editor of Art New England, contributor to
Nyartsmagazine, and the director of exhibitions for The New
England School of Art and Design at Suffolk University.
He is represented by Flatfiles Gallery in Chicago.
More Than Instant Gratification:
American Perspectives: Photographs from the Polaroid Collection
The Boston University Art Gallery
Photographic Resource Center at Boston University
November 22 through January 26
No catalogue but essays by curators Leslie Brown and Stacey
McCarroll in the November December
issue (volume 26, number 6) of In the
Loupe, the newsletter of the Photographic
Resource Center.
With some 100 works by 50 artists, drawn from the 23,000 item
corporate collection of the Cambridge,
Massachusetts based, Polaroid corporation, this exhibition,
American Perspectives:
Photographs from the Polaroid Collection, through January 26,
was simply too big for a single,
mid-sized exhibition venue. Accordingly, for the first time, the
Photographic Resource Center, and the
Boston University Art Gallery, just a brief walk from each other
along the BU campus, have collaborated
to present an exhibition of enormous historical significance.
This generous selection of work, vintage cameras, and archival
materials represents some 80% of what
was included in a major exhibition that opened at the Tokyo
Metropolitan Museum of
Photography and traveled to three other venues in Japan. To the
best of my knowledge, this version of
the exhibition, selected by Leslie Brown for the PRC, and Stacey
McCarroll for BU, will not travel in
the US.
Given the enormous presence and influence of the Polaroid
corporation in the Boston-Cambridge
community it is most significant that, even in a reduced
version, this work is being seen in Boston.
In the area of photography Boston has long enjoyed unique status
on a national and international basis.
There have been many important factors through the years, for
example, the tenure of Minor White at
MIT is regarded as an epic influence. Also at MIT, the presence
of Harold Edgerton and his strobe
research, And, MIT’s, Center for Advanced Visual Studies, as
well as its, Media Lab, have been
other major research resources. Add to that the important
programs in photography in the many
area schools of art.
From the very beginning of the first camera developed by Edwin
H. Land, in 1948, Model 95, the
corporation began to hire major photographers as consultants.
Among the very first recruited in 1949
were Ansel Adams, Paul Caponigro, William Clift, Nick Dean and
John Benson. The company would
continue to be most generous in providing equipment and film to
major artists and photographers. While
its primary market was the general public, with $1.3 billion in
sales by 1983,
it always explored instant photography, not just as instant
gratification for a mass market but as a
serious creative medium. In 1973, it opened the Clarence
Kennedy Gallery in Cambridge as a
showcase for experimental photography using its materials. Also,
several large-format studios were
created with broad access by artists.
In recent years, however, much of this creative activity has
been downscaled and or eliminated. The
gallery closed some years ago and the Polaroid Corporation filed
for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
restructuring in 2001. The company has since been purchased by
One Equity Partners but retains its
name and brand identity. With broad availability of fast print
processing and digital photography
Polaroid had endured strong competition for its market share. At
its peak, in 1983, it held some 1000
patents but since then its research and development, and
marketing strategies have not always
been successful.
A significant turning point occurred with the death of Land, at
age 82, in 1991.
Truly, Land, who was the heart mind and soul of Polaroid was a
true genius who dropped out of
Harvard, after his freshman year in 1926, and, by 1928, had
created the first synthetic sheet
polarizer. While Land is accurately described as one of the
remarkable scientists and inventors of
his generation, as this tandem of exhibitions aptly
demonstrates, he and his company, had a
sensitivity and passion for creativity.
The direct impact on artists has been remarkable. For me,
personally, it started in the 1950s. As a
teenager, I received a Polaroid camera for Christmas.
That day, I exhausted my stash of film
making instant portraits of our family. I hungered for more
material. My mother, a physician, had a
patient who worked for Polaroid and would bring me boxes of film
at reduced rates. I vividly recall the
excitement of watching a print develop followed by the ritual of
coating the images. This was to
prevent fading and chemical alteration but most of those images
eventually got funky. Like many other
early experimenters that led to abandoning the material
and seeking other forms of
photography. But, as it has for millions of
individuals, then and now, it jump started me into a life
long interest in photography.
This two venue exhibition presents some of the super stars of
the medium. Walking into the BU
gallery the centerpiece is a life sized, narrow, vertical self
portrait by Lucas Samaras. It is a strong
and appropriate introduction. Samaras seems to be all
over the exhibition in several different
sections and sub headings. He is one of the artists most
strongly identified with the medium. There
are the self portraits, as well as, small images with
manipulated emulsion, and panoramas pasting
together, narrow, vertical slits of cut prints creating
stretched images of his reclining body.
Jogging just to the left and right of the huge Samaras self
portrait, one finds a signature self portrait
by Andy Warhol, in large format, with eyes closed.
Seemingly sleeping or lost in thought. To the
left, is a famous large self portrait, full face, in
several segments, shot separately by Chuck Close.
In the BU portrait segment are three SX-70 head shots by Warhol
of Truman Capote, Farrah Faucett, and
Ted Kennedy. In his glory days, as a celebrity groupie,
Andy apparently never left home for a
round of parties without his tape recorder and
Polaroid camera.
There are, apparently, a vast number of these Warhol instant
prints. Andy was certainly an instant
gratification, no heavy lifting or daunting technology, kind of
guy. Many of these snap shot portraits
became the basis of the more famous and expensive silk screen
portraits. But these three
sketches of celebrities allow us to visualize his creative
process at its spontaneous inception.
If Warhol’s images are compelling for their celebrity subjects,
the images of Shelby Adams, also in
the BU show, have an appeal on the other end of the spectrum.
The artist has created riveting images
of his neighbors in Appalachia. He has long since left his
childhood home but continues to go
back to his roots to explore the unique and inbred,
impoverished, culture of the mountain based
people.
Also at BU is a horizontal, two-tiered, grid of large format
images of the Cuban born and Boston
based artist, Maria Magdalena Campos Pons. There is a
performative element as she posed before
the camera using a range of props to evoke her native
Santaria. We see details of head and body
parts with markings of paint and manipulations of beads. The
colors are rich and saturated.
The PRC show is divided into several, well-defined categories:
Composites, Photos of Photos,
Manipulation/Process, Images of/ From Pop Culture, and Composing
the Still Life.
The centerpiece and showstoppers are several large format works
by Robert Heinecken. He has created
images comprising an Upper Middle Class Nuclear Family. In these
he created full length, life size,
figures by crushing and combining, in a loose and wacky manner,
pages ripped out of magazines. The
result, while crude and roughly collaged, is amazingly cohesive.
He gets us to believe in these ersatz
Frankenstein examples of the living, media dead. Out there. As
we have come to expect from this
brilliant and eccentric artist.
In the category of, Composites, there is a key example of the
oeuvre of David Hockney, a large
format Polacolor Photograph of an original collage, Interior,
Pembroke Studios, 1986. In the image
we see his approach to fractured cubist space, a sense of time
and space. He simulates the evolution
from static cubism to dynamic futurism. While the
Hockney continues to be fresh and
fascinating, a similar multi valent approach in a work by
Joyce Neimans, M.H., 1985, hung nearby,
now seems like a period piece. It is assembled from a
plethora of SX-70 prints in which she has
painted with silver its signature white edges. This
becomes disruptive when trying to see the figure
as a whole rather than the sum of its parts.
Among the most creative and over the top works in these shows
are two staged and concocted
fantasy/fiction works by Patrick Nagatani/ Andree Tracey. They
elaborately create set pieces with
models and props evoking aspects of nuclear bombs. In one work
as group of Japanese men wearing scuba
goggles wield SX-70 cameras to photograph a nuclear blast.
Shades of Los Alamos.
While above a gaggle of Polaroid snap shots dangle on strings
seemingly flying from their cameras.
The work has a grim humor.
Because of the unwieldy nature of working with a large view
camera to make 29x22" images in the
Polaroid studio, many artists have opted to make still life
setups. This is a particularly rich category
of material well represented by superb images by Boston’s
Olivia Parker, and Bela Kalman. In a
somewhat smaller format is another still life by another Boston
based artist, Marie Cosindas. It is
unfortunate that none of her seminal portrait work is included
in this survey and this important
artist, who has made unique contributions to this material, is
represented by a single image.
Perhaps it is most important to conclude that this exhibition,
however diverse and instructive, just
skims the surface of an enormous corporate collection. Once the
corporation is on more secure footing
we may hope and pray that Polaroid will recommit to its artist
related and exhibition programming. It
is a remarkable creative legacy.
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