During the past several
years, I have been primarily interested in what could best be termed
public spaces - interiors, such as libraries or club houses, or urban
scenarios that unfold in public squares, zoos etc.
I have documented and explored the architecture and activities of
public spaces such as fairgrounds, city parks, cultural festivals,
and street parades in America, recreational facilities and shopping
arcades in Ireland, shopping centers and apartment buildings in London,
city squares and courtyards in Paris, and bureaucratic spaces abandoned
by the Communist government in the former East Berlin.
These photographs of public spaces are often sober and frugal in
feel because I avoid any spectacle or dramatization in the locations.
The emptiness is saturated with a subtle attention to color, and
the prevailing silence instilled with a vernacular yet metaphysical
quality.
They are travel pictures yet they do not identify the place by cultural
or historical details as much as use their particulars to investigate
a detached, disembodied slice of time. The detachment makes
the familiar strange to us.
At the same time, on a parallel track, I turned the camera inward,
finding subject matter, and meaning, in everyday circumstances. I
photographed immediate family and friends, annual rituals such as
soccer-themed birthday parties in Pleasanton, backyard landscape
design in Fresno, and banal pastimes such as watching television. While
the calculated design of these images is similar to that of public
spaces, they prove that while photography has the ability to evoke
the unique person who resides in each human body, it is equally capable
of recording everything and revealing nothing. While making
these photographs, I rediscovered one of the oldest and most rewarding
pleasures of photography - the patient study of details too small,
too incidental, or too overwhelming to have been noticed at the moment
of exposure.
My photographs can make us feel very uncomfortable. They make
a comedy about the food we eat, the clothes we wear, and the places
we go. The photos scrutinize the very way we live our lives. It
could be said that the pictures exploit our lack of good taste and
good judgment by picturing it all in the brightest of colors, exposing
our petty vanities to the world.
Another point of view is that the pictures merely record a myriad
of social ills, the loosening of community ties, the mass embrace
of consumerism, the manic pursuit of leisure and tourism, and the
phantasmagoria of the middle class.
Perhaps I am, like many suburban children of the 50s and 60s, an
outsider, belonging nowhere, with no allegiances and hardly any preferences. Unlike
the classic image of the urban street photographer, I did not grow
up confronting a legacy of bad social engineering and poor quality
building. I grew up in the monotonous comfort of suburban tract
homes and identical strip malls.
I am also, like many of my contemporaries, a product of a cultural
revolution in which opportunities of an academic photographic education
became available to a far wider range of the American population
than ever before, and in which enlightened attitudes to art began
to encompass the "democratic" arts of photography, video, and film
making.
I use photography to express ideas about art and culture rather
than create a record of the world around me. I married my urge
to document with a fascination with social behavior. I am captivated
by the idea of preference and taste - what makes people chose each
other, the idiosyncratic way in which domestic interiors are created,
and why we follow tradition when their original rationale has long
since disappeared.
This photography is essentially a reflection of intense curiosity,
deriving much from the straight photography that influenced me during
the 80s and 90s - Garry Winogrand, Nan Goldin, and Martin Parr, along
with the conceptual photography of Richard Prince, Sherrie Levine,
and Cindy Sherman. I also find inspiration in the artificial
saturation of picture postcards as well as the anonymous family snapshots
found at the corner antique store.
While my approach may be seen as socially transgressive, I feel
that the photographs have a robustness and variability that transcends
a theoretical or political debate. To me, the pictures are
a carefully honed collection of aesthetic devices that are used not
just to define a social point or to underline a cultural statement,
but for their own sake, in celebration of photography's spectacle
as a still, two-dimensional image acting as a mirror to the way we
all live.
After years of exploring the conceptual uses of photography, I have
discovered the art of photography. I now aim to distill from
a great variety of individual observations an essential structure,
unavailable to ordinary experience - to make many pictures from which
to assemble a synthesis.
|