Alex Benjamin
Subscriber
They are also perfect examples of the point that, for many artists, one ought to approach and consider their body of work, rather than individual works in isolation.
This is exactly what the lesson this exhibition, by its sheer magnitude, brings. Looking at print after print after print after print, you stop asking questions about whether it's art or not, idea or not, what the concept is, what it means, what they meant or intended, etc. It just starts making sense, acquires a strange kind of coherence, and for a while, while you're contemplating print after print after print, such questions become irrelevant, and unexpected ones pop up.
What I can only call the transcendance of the experience of viewing this is partly due to the fact that everything looks extremely real and yet slightly unreal, and that one cannot quite figure out why there is that ambiguity between these two states. Part of it is because almost all structures are photographed the exact same way—just about the same amount of blank, neutral space on the top, left and right side between the building and the frame. They are totally isolated, and the effect is that while the building's function is clear, it is totally deprived of context.
Add to that the total absence of any human presence in pictures of buildings, like factories, that are totally deprived of meaning without human presence. The total absence of human presence doesn't really become oppressive after a while. It's weirder than that. You get the feeling, print after print after print after print, that once we all disappear—if we haven't yet, it's not clear looking at the photos—these structures would lose their human-related function and start to acquire a meaning of their own—which, of course, you question but cannot figure out.
Moreover, they are photographed with a large format camera with a raised front standard. This makes all vertical lines parallel, and while this makes sense aesthetically, takes a while to figure out that it also gives the impression that there is something slightly out of phase in your viewing, this because this is not how you actually would see such huge and tall structures in real life, if you were in front of them.
As Spock would say: "fascinating".