Comments/Context: Estonian photographer Sigrid Viir's exploration of the intersection of photography and sculpture goes a step beyond the now commonplace practice of building something to be photographed. While she does indeed construct and make pictures of elaborate installations of everyday objects, she brings her images into the realm of the three dimensional by displaying them in angular wood frames that stand on thin pedestals, roll on wheels, and drop down from high on the walls. It's a double layer of sculptural thinking, entirely upending our expectations for how we are supposed to interact with a photograph.
Inside Viir's photographs, objects are piled into dense interlocking forms, with an eye for simple geometries and color interactions. The jutting legs of overturned tables are balanced by the roundness of two white teacups, while an upended leather couch is decorated with silver chairs, yellow plastic bins, and doilies, creating the hint of an anthropomorphic face. Other constructions recall the odd precariousness of Fischli and Weiss, with stacks of glassware and eggs built up in towers and a white folding chair embellished with blue plastic bags filled with air, a green colander, a shiny silver pot lid, and a yellow sponge.
Collector's POV: The works in this show are priced at $2500 each. Viir's work has not yet found its way to the secondary markets, so gallery retail is likely the only option for interested collectors at this point.
Rating: * (one star) GOOD (rating system described here)
Transit Hub:
- Pulse Prize, 2012 (here)
Through June 30th
Winkleman Gallery
621 West 27th Street
New York, NY 10001
1 comment:
It's time photographers started paying more attention to framing and other aspects of presentation. Going to gallery and museum shows and attending Toronto's Contact over the years, I'm often appalled especially at mounting images behind reflective glass such that I'm moving around trying to see "it" without a ghost of myself or other viewers or the opposite wall superimposed. How can an artist pay god knows what for printing and hanging behind a pane of glass that makes viewing it a ridiculous chore.
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