
SomewhereSomewhere
Laura Letinsky
April 29 - May 28, 2005
For the first time in 7 years Laura Letinsky will unveil
two new bodies of work in Somewhere Somewhere. This exhibition
marks the culmination of Letinsky's ongoing series of still-life photographs
(Morning and Melancholia, I did not remember I had forgotten, and
Hardly More Than Ever 1997 – 2004) and reveals a simultaneous
focus on household interiors and gardens. In the new work, Letinsky continues
to investigate the sentimental and romantic transformations of everyday
life and meditate on the moment before and after events. To do this, she
has pulled away from the tabletop and visually treats us to an increasingly
panoramic view of the home and domesticity.
“Throughout my photographic practice I wish to engage the photograph's
transformative qualities, changing what is typically overlooked into something
beautiful. I want to look at what is "after the fact," at what
(ma)lingers, at what persists, and by inference, at what is gone. These
projects are part of my ongoing photographic exploration of intimacy as
the homely and the beautiful.”
For Letinsky, “home” is a site of contradictions. The pictures
seek to articulate the tension between what actually happened and what
might have been. The interiors are the result of Letinsky’s new
practice of photographing people’s former-and-future homes, places
that for some people mark a past they have left behind and for others
a future that they have yet to inhabit. These ideas are partially captured
in Freud’s idea of the uncanny – the unheimlich or the un-homely
-- and visually represented by Letinsky through describing the pale patches
on wall where picture hung, streaking light beams through dusty windows,
the potted plant that at the 11th hour just did not fit into the moving
van. The gardens, on the other hand symbolize a state of bliss that is
forever out of reach -- a site that belies the picturesque and instead
speaks to the garden’s paradisiacal promise and its marvelous deviation.
The tension between the ideal and the imperfect present reveals a collapse
of the dichotomies that supposedly separate nature and man.
Canadian born (1962) Laura Letinsky received her MFA from Yale University
and currently teaches at the University of Chicago. Her recent hard-cover
book Hardly More Than Ever was published by the UofC Press on the occasion
of her solo exhibition at the Renaissance Society in 2004. Upcoming exhibitions
in 2005 include a solo show at Galerie Kusseneers in Antwerp, Belgium
(with catalogue) and a group exhibition at Pilar Parra & Romero Galeria
de Arte in Madrid, Spain. Her work is in such collections as LaSalle Bank
Photography Collection; Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven; Museum
of Contemporary Art, Chicago; Art Institute of Chicago; Museum of Fine
Art, Houston; and San Francisco Museum of Art.
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