Quiet color.
by Miller, Kristin
JEFF WALL
ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
JUNE 29-SEPTEMBER 23, 2007
Similar to my original reaction to the action-packed lines of
Jackson Pollock, I have never been particularly drawn to Jeff
Wall's large-scale photographs. In publications, his works lack the
presence that they contain in an exhibit such as the recent
retrospective at the Art Institute of Chicago. The exhibit amplified his
vision, forcing viewers to take a second look into the backlit wonders
of a seemingly ordinary location. Colors beckoned with harmonious tones,
glistening in their own resonance. With forty-one of his works,
including most of his major images, the Art Institute presented an
exhibit of sophistication. Viewers lingered with syntactic precision in
rooms that emanated the color of silence and gave a comprehensive voice
to Wall's lengthy career.
Wall's interest in producing large-scale photographic
transparencies mounted in aluminum boxes began in the late 1970s. This
retrospective brought attention to his prolific production of the
lightboxes that have put him on the photographic map. As one entered the
exhibit, lightboxes inhabited the room like large elephants--waiting to
be spoken about. People wandered, looking at their own reflections and
looking at the photographs. Wall's images are stark yet complex in
concept and color. With hints, speckles, and remnants of hues splashed
like waves, his quiet color creeps up the walls.
Interestingly enough, his images capture the gestures, postures,
and thought processes of those who are combing through these
photographic rooms. People are watching people who are watching each
other. Wall manages to bring attention to snippets of life and a glimpse
of a moment that happens so routinely that few bother to mention it. He
is exceptionally skilled at representing people standing still--his
photographs capture the feeling of silence. The stillness is loud and
quiet at the same time. Apparent, striking, and obvious, the rooms
depicted scream with loneliness, stillness, and the solidarity of
simultaneous suburbia and city life. People are waiting, standing still,
and going--and yet, there isn't any motion in the photographs.
Movement is created only in Wall's use of color.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
The colors of Wall's backlit works burst with
energy--projecting reds and greens of an unearthly palette. As a
forerunner in the contemporary narrative and conceptual photography
trend, Wall uses color and lighting as singular units of character in
each piece he creates. Light emulates life, and in turn, has a life-like
quality that breathes global commonality. While most viewers capture
these quiet moments in their heads, Wall increases the saturation of the
colors, bringing out a memory of a particular red balloon, a particular
field that seemed greener than any other field. It is as if he captures
the sense of heightening that we experience when we are in love. With
our senses at their maximum, viewers are sensitive to touch, sight, and
sound, and leave this exhibition visually exhausted and exhilarated.
Quiet seems to be the new loud in contemporary photography--the act
of recreating, recapturing, and mimicking has taken the place of the
importance of documenting the decisive moment of previous photographic
years. Similar to many of his contemporaries such as Gregory Crewdson
and Thomas Demand, Wall's role as photographer includes more than
the "simple" snapping of the shutter. Words such as directing,
setting, producing, staging, and constructing all come to mind in
addition to visualizing and creating. Each large-scale photograph
consists of film that is spliced together--seaming and seeming with
possibilities that reference the duality between art history and the
contemporary photographic world.
Within works such as The Flooded Grave (1998-2000), The Storyteller
(1986), Mimic (1982), and his first lightbox work, The Destroyed Room
(1978), we can see his interest in duality. The seam of the splicing of
the film dances between being obvious and completely obscured; he uses
photomontage and the simultaneous, eerie, hyperrealism projected within
his images; and crosses and connects the lines between art history and
contemporary photography.
Due to his personal interest and travels studying art history,
there is an obvious connection between specific historic images and the
images that Wall has been making since the late 1970s. The Destroyed
Room can be seen in parallel with Eugene Delacroix's seminal The
Death of Sardanapalous (1827). Rumpled clothes, personal effects and
dilapidated furniture serve as a testimony to the increasing lack of
privacy we have in even our most private habitats and echo the violence
and destruction seen in Delacroix's vibrant oils. Other works
include A Sudden Gust of Wind (after Hokusai) (1993), which has the same
movement and spatial drama of the historic woodblock wave.
The duality between these contemporary constructions and his homage
to historical art masters is refreshing. Other photographers underneath
this contemporary umbrella of creating tableaus and fictional narratives
seem to lack this reference and reverence to history--their scenes often
feel empty and void of meaning. Wall's methodology of constructing
seems sculptural, painterly, and assemblage-based--perhaps the element
of the artist's hand is why so many of us are drawn to this trend.
It seems less slick, while at the same time, it retains the clean and
modern gloss, shape, and tone of the history of the photograph. With
infinite possibilities of seaming and being sewn, these constructions
create a space where dreaming within the space of the emulsion can
occur.
Although Wall's work is clearly photography about photography,
he creates a discourse within the square inch of the photograph. The Art
Institute presented this historic exhibition of thirty years of
photographic making in the same grandiose, spilling-over light of
Wall's projected images and his place in photographic history. The
vast scale of his dimensions, as well as the quantity and quality of
this exhibition, force us to take another look into Wall's lifetime
of images.
KRISTIN MILLER is an artist, writer, educator, and Visual Studies
Workshop graduate. She teaches art and art history at Palm Beach
Community College and works at Red Dot Contemporary in West Palm Beach,
Florida.
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.