A new light.
by Strosnider, Luke
JAMES DEAVIN: PHOTOGRAPHS FROM THE NEW WORLD
JEN BEKMAN
NEW YORK CITY
NOVEMBER 1-DECEMBER 9, 2006
From its inception, photography has been a tool of exploration.
Following its origin in Europe, the medium radiated outward, bringing
back images of far-flung, exotic locales. People were able to enjoy
views of ancient ruins, sublime natural vistas, and the goings-on of the
cities and people of the entire globe within the comfort of their own
home. Through the technology of photography, place became less relevant.
To view something, one need not actually be present at the scene. The
value of encountering an experience through a photograph will forever be
interrogated; however, with James Deavin's exhibition
"Photographs from the New World," photography enters an era
where questions of place, experience, and being are cast in a new light.
"Photographs from the New World" shares the pioneering
spirit of the medium's forebears, but Deavin's project brings
us views of no corner of this world. Instead, Deavin has turned his eye
toward the virtual world known as "Second Life," a
three-dimensional online environment where members can do practically
anything. (www.secondlife.com) Meet people, own property, build an
amusement park--if it can conceived of, it can be created. While certain
aspects of Second Life's visual environment (most notably colors
and textures) are undeniably odd, they show no great divorce from the
ways in which we see our "first" life--familiar objects
(trees, bridges, homes) still dot the landscape, and the rules of
perspective still very much apply. Curious as to why a place where
anything was visually possible would look so similar to what we
presently inhabit, Deavin took his "camera"--a software tool
made by Second Life's creators Linden Labs, which made files large
enough for 50 x 37.5 inch digital C-prints--on an exploration through
Second Life.
Viewing the images, one begins to see Second Life as a spatially
limitless but largely empty place. While the Second Life Web site claims
close to two million "inhabitants," only a few figures appear
among the images in the exhibition; oddly (or perhaps fittingly) one of
them is gazing at what appears to be a large television screen. While
Deavin's previous photographs of the landscape in the "real
world" lends a tranquil peace to empty scenes, the effect when
transferred to the wide-open spaces of Second Life is that of an eerie,
post-apocalyptic world. Instead, Second Life is a world just being born,
a place where buildings and other structures can be conjured up quickly,
while the migration of users from this life to Second Life will take
more time. Deavin considers this in his statement and sees his project
as somewhat documentary. He writes: "[P]erhaps one way to
understand these photographs is as a piece of Second Life history,
markers of a time when people were still viewing the new world through
the eyes of the old."
Deavin's style is noticeably consistent from world to world:
deadpan views of spaces that are simultaneously universal and specific.
His eye seeks the odd detail capable of triggering a range of emotional
or personal reactions to otherwise mundane scenes: in his terrestrial
series "Three Star" we find bits of glittering, multi-colored
confetti lying quietly on cheap office carpeting; in "Photographs
from the New World" three balloons find themselves tied to a
staircase railing in an empty and unremarkable rendition of a Second
Life home interior. The forlorn loneliness of objects is certainly not a
new photographic theme. However, the effect works no matter which
"world" the image is taken from, interestingly mimicking
Deavin's investigation of the two environments' visual
similarity.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Given the slick, digital surfaces of much of the Second Life
landscape, the leap to considering these images as photographs can be
difficult at first, and photographic purists will no doubt leave aghast.
Beyond the debates of form and style is the greater significance of this
show and its implications for the future of photography. Deavin's
title makes it clear that these are to be considered photographs; and
they're mounted in a gallery whose focus has been primarily
contemporary photography. This show takes the position that
photographers are moving beyond capturing light in this plane and are
moving off into other worlds. Photography and reality have always had an
uneasy relationship; with this exhibition the gulf is widened.
Technologies developed at Canon, Kodak, and Nikon, and more
recently Epson, Hewlett Packard, and Sony, have always wrought change on
the medium, and the ways in which images are made and reproduced is
constantly shifting. But the subject before the camera--be it analog or
digital--has always been the views and vistas of our primary reality.
Now that new worlds are being created via new technologies, artists will
enter them and create artworks based on what they encounter.
Photography's journey of exploration has come a long way from
horse-drawn wagons laden with glass plates and collodion, but it appears
that the trip is not over yet.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Visual Studies
Workshop Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.