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Jeff Wall

 
Biography: Jeff Wall

Art, a form of self-expression, can create or reflect reality. Canadian artist Jeff Wall (born 1946) expresses himself by recreating paintings as photographic panoramas and by reflecting a natural but staged reality. His work is "clearly the work of a man with a deft visual sense and an interestingly complicated mind," noted Jed Perl in the New Republic.

Jeff Wall was born in 1946 in Canada. Growing up in Vancouver, British Columbia, Wall pursued his artistic talent with support from his family. Yet, his decision to attend the University of British Columbia and not an art school surprised his relatives. This would be only one decision that seemed out of character for an artist. Wall earned a master's degree in art and continued his doctoral education at the Courtauld Institute in London. However, "feeling that he had acquired enough learning to serve his creative purposes," commented Lee Robbins in ARTnews, Wall left the Institute and began a career, not as an artist, but as a teacher.

Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, Wall taught art history at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design and at Simon Fraser University. By 1987, Wall accepted a position at his alma mater, the University of British Columbia, where he remains a member of the faculty. Other personal information Wall has kept private. He believes that "this information is [not] relevant to an understanding of his art," reported Robbins in ARTnews. However, the public has learned that Wall is married and has maintained a close relationship to his family - they have appeared as models in his photographs.

Recreated Old Masters into Photographs

Wall's journey as an artist began in the 1960s. During this time of dropping out, establishment rejection, and free love, Wall discovered that "the best tool for expressing his own conceptual ideas [was photography] and taught himself how to use a camera," Robbins stated in ARTnews. By the early 1970s, Wall had successfully revealed his artistic ideas by blending both written text and photographs to create a documentary of everyday life.

By the late 1970s, Wall had tired of creating documentaries. He wanted to "move back toward pictorial art," ARTnews further affirmed. He wanted to create powerful images that represented, and not just documented, life but was unsure of how to do so. Inspiration struck when Wall noticed how lighted advertisements on city streets captured his attention. "I thought immediately that the medium although it was used for advertising - in fact did not belong to advertising in any essential sense," he told ARTnews. "It was a free medium, one inherent to photography and film."

Wall explored this new, free medium by recreating legendary paintings as photographic backlit transparencies. For example, in 1978, Wall reflected the past with his work, The Destroyed Room. Taking the theme of hidden violence within the home from Delacroix's 1827 work Death of Sardanapalus, The Destroyed Room offered its own depiction of modern life. Wall connected the two works by restaging "compositional elements … in contemporary urban settings, tempering them with an aura of 20th-century banality," noted ARTnews.

For the next 10 years, Wall continued recreating paintings into photographs. In 1979, he even "metaphorically [placed himself] in the role of Manet's obtrusive male customer-spectator" in his recreation of that artist's Picture for Women noted Reed Johnson in the Daily News. Wall's reasoning for these recreations are "not out to bury art in worshipful attitudes, but to grapple with its most exacting standards."

Art critics praised Wall for his ingenuity in using backlight for his photography and for his honorable attempts to bring masterful paintings new life through pictures. More praise was to come because Wall's true self-expression had not yet been explored. His true self was not a recreative photographer. As the Times (London) stated, Wall's true self was much more theatrical: "Wall has the hands and the eyes of a photographer, but in his veins the blood of a cinematographer flows."

Turned Photography into Film-Making

During the 1990s, Wall began seeing photography as a medium to connect film and literature to art. To create such a connection, Wall first redesigned his studio, modeling it after "cinematic film production-miniaturized," stated ARTnews. Next, he began shooting his photographs much like a Hollywood movie; he built and dressed large sets, gathered costumes, and hired models. The resulting photographs were a representation of the natural world. However, Wall had not simply happened upon a scene and clicked a picture. He artificially recreated the natural scene where he controlled the image.

This control of the image dominated much of Wall's future works. Art in America writer Richard Vine noticed that in these works the "forced stillness, irreal lighting and blatantly artificial composition" question their reality. For example, in his 1995 photograph Man on the Street, Wall juxtaposes one man sitting on a bench, his gaze downward, smiling with that of the same man walking down the street, his gaze still downward, frowning. The viewer recognizes that the scene is staged, but by "blatantly devising his shots, he induces us [viewers] to ask exactly what is we ordinarily read as "natural" - and why," Vine further commented.

Wall's artification of the natural world drove him to search everywhere for subjects and themes for his work. He told Robbins in ARTnews that "a subject can emerge from anything at all… . Reading something, meeting a person whose appearance sets something off, a place… ." In 1997, a place inspired Wall to create his next work, but this time his work would not be a backlit photograph, but a "photograph in iron," quoted Daniel Birnbaum in Artforum.

Discovered New Media

Commissioned by the Dutch government to create a monument for Rotterdam's Whilhelmina pier, Wall leapt into a new medium for his art-iron. And, he actually gathered trash - ropes, luggage, crates - and used them as pieces of the monument. "These discarded possessions bear witness to a specific moment," Birnbaum noted in Artforum. The intended effect of this specific moment was that he wanted people walking down the pier to "find themselves inside a completely artificial world, reminiscent of a stage set." And, once inside this world, they would be able to feel that they've discovered "some quite ordinary things that have been forgotten and the complex experience of relating to things from the past."

Also in the late 1990s, Wall, still maintaining his love for recreating reality through artification, stepped away from that artificial world and stepped into landscape photography. This photography became a "more personal … artistic adventure…" stated the Times (London). However, Wall's "devious intention" of making his landscapes look like snapshots continued his theme of artification even in these photographs. "I am interested in getting these pictures to look like they could have been snapshots, partly because that is the way photographs are expected to look," Wall told the Times (London). "Moreover, most very beautiful and successful photographs have looked that way."

Critically Praised and Rewarded

In 2002, Wall enjoyed critical success when he was awarded the Hassleblad Foundation International Award in Photography. With this recognition, the world was reminded that photography - whether it recreates history or reflects nature in a staged reality - is an important art medium. And, Wall's ability to "marry his high intentions with the easy accessibility of his chosen format … is real genius," hailed the Independent. However, Wall's technological genius is not the only quality that sets his photography apart from other art. As Time Canada writer Deborah Solomon suggested, it is his ability, his self-expression through his photography that makes it "hard to think of another living photographer whose work leaves us with so potent a record of how actual life actually feels."

Periodicals

Art in America, April 1996.

Artforum, May 1997.

ARTnews, November 1995.

Daily News, July 28, 1997.

Independent, March 19, 1996.

New Republic, April 28, 1997.

Time Canada, March 1, 1999.

Times (London), December 10, 2002.

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Wall, Jeff (b. 1946), Canadian artist, born and resident in Vancouver. Working with photography since the late 1970s, Wall's modus operandi is akin to that of the conductor or film director, enabling actors, props, landscapes, and light to work in unison. His work consists of painstakingly staged and composed photographs, sometimes involving digital manipulation, realized as large-scale colour transparencies and displayed on lightboxes like those used in advertising. They explore contemporary social and political realities—poverty, class and gender conflicts, racist violence, urban living conditions. In constant dialogue with historical art forms, genre painting in particular, and with cinema, Wall creates complex, often enigmatic visual narratives of modern life. Often ‘documentary’-seeming at first sight, they frequently cross the borders between the real and the fictive, the journalistic and the phantasmagoric. Mimic (1982) is a constructed ‘street photograph’ of a racist encounter; Dead Troops Talk (1992) a panoramic after-death fantasy retelling the ambush of a Red Army unit in Afghanistan. Often using locations in multicultural Vancouver, Wall's oeuvre renders his perception of the contemporary human condition with disturbing precision: the isolated, lonely individual, unfree, enmeshed in conflicts and contradictions.

— Jan-Erik Lundström

Bibliography

  • Ammann, J.-C. (ed.), Jeff Wall the Storyteller (1992).
  • Duve, T. de, et al., Jeff Wall (1996)
Wikipedia: Jeff Wall
Top
Jeff Wall
Born September 29, 1946(1946-09-29)
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Nationality Canadian
Field Photography, Photoconceptualism
Training University of British Columbia, Courtauld Institute
Movement Vancouver School
Works Picture for Women (1979), Mimic (1982), A Sudden Gust of Wind (after Hokusai) (1993)
Awards OC, Hasselblad Award, Royal Society of Canada

Jeff Wall, OC (born September 29, 1946) in Vancouver, British Columbia is a Canadian artist best known for his large-scale back-lit cibachrome photographs and art-historical writing. Wall has been a key figure in Vancouver's art scene for years. Early in his career, he helped define the Vancouver School and he has published essays on the work of his close colleagues and fellow Vancouverites Rodney Graham, Ken Lum and Ian Wallace. His photographic tableaux often takes Vancouver's mixture of natural beauty, urban decay and postmodern and industrial featurelessness as their backdrop.

Contents

Biography

Jeff Wall received his MA from the University of British Columbia in 1970, with a thesis titled, Berlin Dada and the Notion of Context and did postgraduate work at the Courtauld Institute from 1970-73, where he studied with Manet expert T.J. Clark.[1][2] Wall was assistant professor at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (1974-75), associate professor at Simon Fraser University (1976-87) and taught for many years at the University of British Columbia. He has published essays on Dan Graham, Rodney Graham, Roy Arden, Ken Lum, Stephen Balkenhol, On Kawara, and other contemporary artists.[3]

In 1996 Wall was to replace Bernd Becher as head professor of the photography department at the Düsseldorf Academy, but was confronted by a former Becher student who pointed a loaded gun at him. He immediately resigned.[4]

In 2002, he was awarded the Hasselblad Award. In 2006, he was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. [5] Jeff Wall was named an Officer of the Order of Canada in December 2007.[6] In March 2008, Wall was awarded the Audain Prize for Lifetime Achievement, British Columbia's annual award for the visual arts.[7]

Work

Wall experimented with conceptual art while an undergraduate student at UBC.[1] Wall then made no art until 1977, when he produced his first backlit phototransparencies.[8] Many of these pictures are staged and refer to the history of art and philosophical problems of representation. The photographs' compositions often allude to historical artists like Diego Velázquez, Hokusai, and Édouard Manet, or to writers such as Franz Kafka, Yukio Mishima, and Ralph Ellison.[9]

Mimic (1982)

Mimic[10] (1982) typifies Wall's cinematographic style. A 198 x 226 cm. colour transparency, it shows a white couple and an Asian man walking towards the camera. The sidewalk, flanked by parked cars and residential and light-industrial buildings, suggests a North American industrial suburb. The woman is wearing red shorts and a white top displaying her midriff; her bearded, unkempt boyfriend wears a denim vest. The Asian man is casual but well-dressed in comparison, in a collared shirt and slacks. As the couple overtake the man, the boyfriend makes an ambiguous but apparently obscene and racist gesture, holding his upraised middle finger close to the corner of his eye, "slanting" his eye in mockery of the Asian man's eyes. The picture resembles a candid shot that captures the moment and its implicit social tensions, but is actually a recreation of an exchange witnessed by the artist.

Wall's work advances an argument for the necessity of pictorial art.[9] Some of Wall's photographs are complicated productions involving cast, sets, crews and digital postproduction. They have been characterized as one-frame cinematic productions. Wall distinguishes between unstaged "documentary" pictures, like Still Creek, Vancouver, winter 2003, and "cinematographic" pictures, produced using a combination of actors, sets, and special effects, such as Overpass, 2001. His signature works are large transparencies mounted on light boxes; he says he conceived this format when he saw back-lit advertisements at bus stops during a trip between Spain and London. Since the mid-1990s, Wall has also made large scale black and white photographs, some of which were exhibited at Kassel's Documenta X, as well as smaller colour prints.

Other media

Sonic Youth's compilation album The Destroyed Room: B-sides and Rarities uses Jeff Wall's 1978 photograph The Destroyed Room. The cover image of Iggy Pop's 1999 album Avenue B is a portrait photograph of Iggy by Wall.

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b Newman, "Towards the Reinvigoration of the 'Western Tableau': Some Notes on Jeff Wall and Duchamp", p. 83
  2. ^ Hochdörfer Jeff Wall: Photographs
  3. ^ Wall, Jeff (2007). Jeff Wall: Selected Essays and Interviews. New York: Museum of Modern Art.
  4. ^ The Bechers' Industrial Lexicon
  5. ^ Royal Society of Canada, New Fellows 2006
  6. ^ Order of Canada 2007
  7. ^ Wall Awarded Audain Prize for Lifetime Achievement
  8. ^ Newman, "Towards the Reinvigoration of the 'Western Tableau': Some Notes on Jeff Wall and Duchamp", p. 85
  9. ^ a b Newman, "Towards the Reinvigoration of the 'Western Tableau': Some Notes on Jeff Wall and Duchamp", pp. 83-4
  10. ^ http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/jeffwall/infocus/section1/img4.shtm

Bibliography

  • Hochdörfer, Achim, ed. Jeff Wall: Photographs. Cologne: Walther König, 2003. ISBN 3883756989
  • Newman, Michael. "Towards the Reinvigoration of the 'Western Tableau': Some Notes on Jeff Wall and Duchamp." Oxford Art Journal 30.1 (2007): 81-100.
  • Wall, Jeff. Jeff Wall: Selected Essays and Interviews. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 2007. ISBN 0870707086

Further reading

  • Campany, David. "'A Theoretical Diagram in an Empty Classroom': Jeff Wall's Picture for Women." Oxford Art Journal 30.1 (2007): 7-25.
  • Crow, Thomas. "Profane illuminations: Social History and the Art of Jeff Wall." ArtForum Vol. 31 No. 6 (Feb. 1993): 62-69.
  • de Duve, Thierry, Arielle Pélenc and Boris Groïs. Jeff Wall. London: Phaidon Press, 1996. ISBN 0714833495
  • Lubow, Arthur. "The Luminist." The New York Times (February 25, 2007).
  • Lütticken, Sven. "The Story of Art According to Jeff Wall." Secret Publicity: Essays on Contemporary Art. Rotterdam: NAi Publishers, 2005. 69-82. ISBN 9056624679
  • Martin, Stewart. "Wall’s Tableau Mort." Oxford Art Journal 30.1 (2007): 117-33.
  • Vasudevan, Alexander. "'The Photographer of Modern Life': Jeff Wall's Photographic Materialism." Cultural Geographies Vol. 14, No. 4 (2007): 563-588.
  • Whyte, Murray. "Jeff Wall: The Visible Man." Canadian Art (May 11, 2006).

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