JTF (just the facts): A total of 22 works, including 19 black and white photographs, 1 black and white photogravure, and 2 sculptures, generally unframed, and displayed in the entry gallery, the two side rooms, and the main divided space in the back. 17 of the photographs are black and white RC prints mounted to Russian ply panels, with Golden acrylics and Golden UV varnish. These works were made between 1998 and 2001, and come in editions of 4+2AP; physical dimensions range between 34×45 to 41×62. The other 2 photographs are fiber based prints on cotton rag and aluminum honeycomb with encaustic. These works were made in 1997 and come in editions of 4+1AP; physical dimensions for both are roughly 26×22. The single photogravure in the show was made in 2000, in an edition of 40+5AP, with dimensions of 20×18. The two sculptures were made in 2011. A monograph of this body of work is available from Twin Palms (here). (Installation shots at right.)
Comments/Context: The images from Robert and Shana ParkeHarrison’s series The Architect’s Brother were made more than a decade ago, and I’m guessing that most collectors will recognize them at least tangentially, as they have been displayed in plenty of venues in the years since and because they have such a distinctive style. While I may have flipped through the monograph at a bookstore or seen an image or two reproduced somewhere before, this was the first time I had actually seen the photographs in person shown together as an entire body of work.
If you had asked me before my visit what I could tell you about this work, I likely would have loosely categorized it as surreal and theatrical, perhaps a bit heavy handed and gimmicky in its sepia toned retro staginess. But as I stood in the gallery, I found many of the images more compelling than I had previously given them credit for. There is an undeniable creativity and originality on display here, a kind of dystopian fairy tale aesthetic that alternates between the metaphorical and the fanciful. In every scene, a solitary man struggles against the destruction of the natural world, surrounded by dark smoky skies and scarred, featureless horizons. He tries to clean the clouds, listens to the wind, delusionally repairs tree stumps, and builds a contraption to make rain. There is something inordinately sad about the increasingly odd efforts of this lone man fighting a losing battle fix nature. His endeavors to make sense of it all, using backward hand built props, are both surprisingly poignant and cautionary.
What I think is most interesting about these pictures is that the ParkeHarrisons have taken on the timely issue of the human impact on our environment, but have avoided the more mainstream approach of making large color pictures of polluted rivers, immense mountain top removal mines, smog choked cities, and deforested wilderness. Instead, they have made more intimate performance pieces that focus on the connectedness of man and nature, fairy tales that imagine a science fiction world where we symbolically labor to recover what we have lost.
Rating: * (one star) GOOD (rating system described here)
- Artist site (here)