Sep 27th 2016

Concurrent with Moholy-Nagy: Future Present, this exhibition, which features books on artists, highlights experimental photography’s collaborations with light and time and the simultaneous generosity and violence of the sun.

Commencing with a reproduction of William Fox Talbot’s six-installment publication The Pencil of Nature, this exhibition emanates from his definition of photographs as “photogenic drawings” generously “impressed by the agency of Light alone,” an interpretation that draws attention to the indexicality and medium-specificity of photography and its fundamental qualities: light and time.
Featuring books and periodicals on experimental photographers Chris McCaw and Charles Ross, who both collaborate with the sun, encouraging a concentration of the sun’s light and heat through lenses to burn marks into film and wood, respectively, evidencing the sun’s destructive capabilities and its ability to author its own marks.

Two editions of Kikuji Kawada’s The Map document the violent “black stain” effect of the “intense sunlight of Hiroshima” produced by the Atomic Bomb. These are accompanied by an anonymously created book, which speaks of a black sun that lives within the center of our planet.

Books documenting László Moholy-Nagy’s light sculptures are represented alongside representations of Otto Piene’s installation The Proliferation of the Sun, detailing how mid-20th century artists harnessed electric light within time-based performances to elicit the sun’s energy and vibrance.

Finally, connections are made with a collection of books depicting the solar writings of Kukulkán at Chichen Itza, the mythic son of the sun Akhenaten, and album covers of the jazz musician Sun Ra, who composed music of the sun with his Solar Arkestra.

Chris McCaw. Sunburned GSP#360 (Pacific Ocean), 2009. Reproduced from Chris McCaw: Sunburn. Richmond, VA: Candela, 2012.

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