Optic
Nerve brings together the work of six artists, Richard
Caldicott, Robert Davies, Garry
Fabian Miller, Neil Reddy, Daro
Montag & Roderick Packe,
who
share an experimental and unconventional approach to photography.
Often working without cameras, lenses, film or even light,
they all produce luminous, colour-saturated images that
question traditional ideas about what
a photograph is and
how it can be made.
Rather
than capturing a single 'decisive moment', they create
images that record the transitory passage of time, tracing
and superimposing the optical effects of improvised but
highly controlled processes to reveal new visual spaces
and seductive tonalities.Their
work has a simplicity and visual intensity that is both
contemplative and challenging and suggests many possible
connections to modernist painting and visionary cinema.
It
is to the work of experimental and abstract filmmakers,
of whom Stan Brakhage and Jordan Belson are perhaps
the most well known, that the Optic Nerve artists can
most closely be compared. The directness, simplicity
and inventiveness of their use of materials and light
are a part of what they have
in common: contrary to
much current manipulation of photographic imagery,
no computer technology is used here. Optical, chemical
and mechanical effects and experimental techniques
that intensively explore the potentials of natural
phenomena are common to all of these artists. Rather
than technical sophistication or digital complexity,
they are concerned with inquiry, invention and intuitive
improvisation through simple manual processes that
have their equivalent in the work of Brakhage or Belson.
Derek Horton, catalogue essay
The
exhibition is curated by Roderick Packe and organised
by Wolsey Art Gallery. A full-colour catalogue with
an essay by Derek Horton accompanies the exhibition. |