Showing posts with label Chloe Rosser. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chloe Rosser. Show all posts

Tuesday, 12 June 2018

'Form & Function' by Chloe Rosser : A Guest post from artist Lisa Holden



©Chloe Rosser 
Function 1, 8   2018


I was absolutely thrilled when artist & writer Lisa Holden was inspired to write this wonderful text about the current LANG exhibition Form & Function by Chloe Rosser on display at Photofusion in Brixton until 18 June 2018.  It is a pleasure to have this as a guest post. 


©Chloe Rosser
Function 2, 3  2018

Form & Function 

Chloe Rosser photographs the human body, naked, contorted, within the confines of plain domestic spaces. Her models strike sculptural poses – they lean, sit, slant, twist – but always avoiding references to classical statuary or art historical nudes. And Rosser’s models never show their faces. So, what’s going on?  By anonymising her sitters, and accentuating skin tone and gesture, Rosser’s images could almost be interpreted as a conversation about identity. After all, photography is a medium that lends itself to concocting identities through disguise, concealment or digital tweaking. But both of these series can also be read differently. The images shift constantly from the specific to the abstract, hinting at a totemic, symbolic meaning. The contours and shadowing suggest archetypal shapes and remind us of the clay figurines and artefacts from prehistoric cultures. Perhaps Rosser’s human ‘forms’ are also an invitation to imagine the body not simply as a thing of flesh and bone, but as a tool for tapping into the collective memory of mankind, the genetic code within ourselves.

John Coplans 
Self-Portrait (Back with Arms Above) 1984
©The Estate of John Coplans 

Seen in this light, Rosser’s models are anything but anonymous; they are universal. They are us, we are them. And if the body is capable of accessing this primordial coded language, then Rosser’s subjects, photographed singly or in groupings, can be read as a visual expression of something primordial and ancient. Something the late photographer John Coplans (with whom Rosser’s work shares some common ground) calls ‘a memory of our past ancestry’. Coplans – born in London and originally trained as a painter – photographed his own body in later life, depersonalising it, turning into a play of light and dark, mass and form.

©Chloe Rosser 
Function 6, 9  2018

Rosser’s approach to the body is not dissimilar –  her ‘forms’ are equally abstract, almost bordering on the surreal. Unlike Coplans’ grainy black and white imagery, however, Rosser’s visual language has an almost brittle clarity. The formal execution of the images contrasts with the models’ soft flesh, knobby spines and straining muscles. And draws us in, to look closer and pick up on other contrasts – skin against laminate wood, against plaster, against carpet. A thigh disappears into a wall. Shoulders are shoved into a floor. The sense of the surreal, even the uncanny, is unmistakable. What are we looking at? Why are these forms here, in these spaces? What are they doing here?

©Chloe Rosser
Function 4, 1  2018

The models in Rosser’s photographs may pose alone or together – some are total strangers, others close companions. Always calm, respectful.  There are no divides here. Framed by neutral spaces, Rosser’s ‘forms’ tell stories, and some are about us – snatches of collective memory that speak of what has been and dream of what may come.

Chloe Rosser & Laura Noble are running a full-day workshop, Exploring the Body in Photography - on Saturday 16th June at Photofusion. This will include live life models, strictly limited to 10 places. There are a couple of places left. You can find all the details here
Email: hello@lauraannnoble.com to book. 


Chloe Rosser’s first book, Form and Function, is in the making! There’s still time to get involved with the Kickstarter campaign. The Kickstarter ends at 5.30 pm, 18th June. Here's a link if you would like to support it. Thank you



Saturday, 23 August 2014

Love London Life!


On the left just past White Cube before the church.

Ring the bell, we are on the 1st floor.

The view from above

The view inside

Now approaching its last week, the ‘London Life CompetitionExhibition’ at L A Noble Gallery in collaboration with Art Bermondsey I thought I would share with you some of my observations, weird coincidences & visitors comments. It has been a breeze for some, a learning curve for others but I hope, ultimately a great experience for all the finalists.  
The Private View, announcing the winners

Opening night was a lively affair as always, with many of the finalists in attendance.


1st Prize - Carlotta Cardana

The winner Carlotta Cardana is now an L A Noble Gallery artist see her wonderful work here. (There are 2 projects including her latest series, more about that in another post) She is currently showing her 'Modern Couples' at the Noorderlicht Festival as well, busy times for a worthy winner!

The series pictures Mod couples in their chosen locations. By asking them to choose each couple is clearly comfortable therefore the resulting photographs reveal much more than a studio sitting. 


2nd place winner: Sheryl Tait 

During the evening we discovered the most wonderful coincidence - 2 photographers had both discovered their imagery in the same place. 


This extraordinary fact came to light when David O' Mara pointed to the buildings in James Reid's picture & said that is where he found the negatives he printed from. London really is a small place after all! 

These 2 approaches reflect the diversity of this city in one place, a council estate in Elephant & Castle that was once the largest in Europe (now gone) full of many souls all living their lives in many different ways… 


© David O'Mara  
Heygate Palimpset 2 / 2012

O' Mara's salvaging of negatives & printing them despite their dilapidated state , then presenting them in frames worthy of any great image elevates them to be appreciated by a new audience in a new way treats the snapshots taken of & by  an unknown family with respect. In one image the edges of the frame have worn away to create a portal of an image which beautifully resembles a silhouette of a woman in profile - in the aperture a woman in a pink headpiece reinforces the suggestion made by the shape. Another wonderful coincidence…?

3rd Prize winner: Alison J Carr

The difference in experiencing the work in the flesh is further emphasised with Alison J Carr's work. Her recreations of dancers on cigarette cards from the 1930's really transform the origins of the objects which inspired her to a whole new level. 
The back of the card duplicated exactly & the same size as the original
to offer the context & physicality of the initial object to the work.
We are treated to the attributes & talents of the dancer that 
was pictured on the other side of the original card, 
as well as a great additional caption. 


As the originals were black & white so are Carr's (hand-printed silver gelatin in fact). However to give them some colour she has framed the works in the dominant colour of each costume she wears in the picture. The more home-made nature of the costumes makes for a more authentic picture of the period.

©Walter Rothwell
Walter Rothwell's silver gelatin prints have to be seen in person to see the perfect 
example of quality printing with all its deep blacks & variety of tones. 

Rothwell's work has a wonderful duality, you look twice & see the humour & irony after the contents of the images' reality sinks in. The limo is so glossy that it is only upon closer inspection that you realise that it is rusting & abandoned. By using the cinematic proportions & cropping out the rest of the street the windows act like frames on celluloid & the context reveals itself slowly. This is the place where the artist sets the tone & narrative through composition. 

©Walter Rothwell

In another of his images Kate Bush's old house once owned by a man who was done for multi-million pound fraud (see here for details) depicts the fading hopes & grandeur of the aspirational dream of fame & fortune & acts as a warning to us all. Wuthering Heights indeed! 

©Louis Savage  Der Spiegel  2013
To further prove that beauty can be found in the most unlikely of places, Louis Savage's work takes us into familiar territory with pleasing results. The geometry of the tiles interrupted by the black outline of the woman walking through the tunnel makes me wonder if she uses the domed mirror to check if anyone is coming the other way or if she just uses it to check her appearance each day… Capturing these tiny moments is what photography does so well. Why not come & see for yourself?

Here are some more of the finalists with their work:

Stuey Burnett looking sharp with his work.

Emma Mapp as colourful as her photo

Pat Doyle happy angles!

Finally, a big thanks to all my amazing staff, Kelly here on the left & 
Co-Curator Chloe Rosser on the right wields the drill.

Lovely coffee nearby, don't be put off by the name! 

See www.lauraannnoble.com for info.  

The exhibition runs till 4pm Friday August 29th.

Portfolio reviews can be booked for next week, last review at 2pm Friday, to see more info read here


Venue:
Art Bermondsey
183-185 Bermondsey Street, First Floor, London, SE1 3UW
Visiting information:
Tube: London Bridge
Buses: 42, 78, 100, 1 and C10 (direct to Bermonsey Square) or all buses to London Bridge.