A Handful of Dust: From the Cosmic to the Domestic
An enigmatic photograph made by Man Ray serves as a point of departure for the exhibition A Handful of Dust: from the Cosmic to the Domestic, organized by British curator and renowned image researcher, David Campany. The exhibition explores the complexities of the relationship between photography and art in the past century, and contemplates the various allegories represented by dust throughout the development of human civilization on scales as varied as the minutiae of domesticity and the grandeur of the universal, as well as examines ways in which these metaphors are explored and presented in the expression of photography and visual art.
Radiating from the life (or the mysterious identity) of May Ray鈥檚 enigmatic photo of dust as a main axis, the 66 sets of work displayed at the National Center of Photography and Images encompass aerial reconnaissance photos, news photography, postcards, and avant-garde publications from the first half of the 20th century; as well as photographic representations of conceptual art, works of the dialectics between painting and photography, and images of modern warfare and the aftermath of natural disasters. More recent works included in the exhibition highlight artistic interpretations of urgent propositions that confront our time, as well as point out major transformations in the practice and technological advancements of photography.
In addition to works by Man Ray and Marcel Duchamp, A Handful of Dust also features works by major figures throughout the history of photography: including Walker Evans鈥檚 works depicting drought-stricken panoramas in the American Midwest during the Dust Bowl, and Sh艒mei T艒matsu鈥檚 photos of the Japanese landscape in the aftermath of the atomic bomb. Works by Edward Ruscha and John Divola further introduce photography into the realm of artistic performance. Sophie Ristelhueber pays homage to Man Ray鈥檚 iconic Dust Breeding through her aerial photograph of the Kuwaiti desert, which at the same time reveals a burgeoning transformation in the 1990s when war photography pivoted from images taken 鈥渁t鈥 the war to the 鈥渁ftermath鈥 and 鈥渞emnants鈥 of the war; while video artist Kirk Palmer and celebrated French filmmaker Alain Resnais present the language of post-war trauma through poetic imagery. The exhibition also includes works by a younger generation of artists such as Xavier Ribas and Louise Oates, who explore changes in the natural and cultural landscapes as a result of political or economic behavior; as well as Eva Stenram鈥檚 transformations of photos of Mars by intentionally accumulating dust on the image surface to create a juxtaposition of vastly varied distances.
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An enigmatic photograph made by Man Ray serves as a point of departure for the exhibition A Handful of Dust: from the Cosmic to the Domestic, organized by British curator and renowned image researcher, David Campany. The exhibition explores the complexities of the relationship between photography and art in the past century, and contemplates the various allegories represented by dust throughout the development of human civilization on scales as varied as the minutiae of domesticity and the grandeur of the universal, as well as examines ways in which these metaphors are explored and presented in the expression of photography and visual art.
Radiating from the life (or the mysterious identity) of May Ray鈥檚 enigmatic photo of dust as a main axis, the 66 sets of work displayed at the National Center of Photography and Images encompass aerial reconnaissance photos, news photography, postcards, and avant-garde publications from the first half of the 20th century; as well as photographic representations of conceptual art, works of the dialectics between painting and photography, and images of modern warfare and the aftermath of natural disasters. More recent works included in the exhibition highlight artistic interpretations of urgent propositions that confront our time, as well as point out major transformations in the practice and technological advancements of photography.
In addition to works by Man Ray and Marcel Duchamp, A Handful of Dust also features works by major figures throughout the history of photography: including Walker Evans鈥檚 works depicting drought-stricken panoramas in the American Midwest during the Dust Bowl, and Sh艒mei T艒matsu鈥檚 photos of the Japanese landscape in the aftermath of the atomic bomb. Works by Edward Ruscha and John Divola further introduce photography into the realm of artistic performance. Sophie Ristelhueber pays homage to Man Ray鈥檚 iconic Dust Breeding through her aerial photograph of the Kuwaiti desert, which at the same time reveals a burgeoning transformation in the 1990s when war photography pivoted from images taken 鈥渁t鈥 the war to the 鈥渁ftermath鈥 and 鈥渞emnants鈥 of the war; while video artist Kirk Palmer and celebrated French filmmaker Alain Resnais present the language of post-war trauma through poetic imagery. The exhibition also includes works by a younger generation of artists such as Xavier Ribas and Louise Oates, who explore changes in the natural and cultural landscapes as a result of political or economic behavior; as well as Eva Stenram鈥檚 transformations of photos of Mars by intentionally accumulating dust on the image surface to create a juxtaposition of vastly varied distances.