Thursday, 27 January 2011

Maurizio Anzeri



Who would have thought there was a way to make String Art interesting and relevant in this day and age? There was an era in the Seventies when nearly every house had some sort of geometric wall-hanging made from string or thread - endless repeated lines overlaid on fabric panels. Thankfully, they seemed to disappear from walls around the mid-Eighties as tastes changed. Italian artist Maurizio Anzeri uses this retro technique in his work, painstakingly embroidering intricate shapes over found vintage photographs, creating haunting and disturbing 'portraits'. The vintage prints only add to the other-worldliness of the images.
Talking about his work, Anzeri says "Photographs from the 40s and 50s have a totally different quality from photos we’re used to today. We don’t recognise them as photographs now, they really look like watercolours or drawings. I’ve been collecting old photographs for a long time. A few years ago I was doing ink drawings with them and out of curiosity I stitched into one. I work a lot with threads and hand stitching, and the link to photography was a natural progression. I put tracing paper over the photo and draw on the face until it develops. Sometimes the image comes straight away, suggested by a detail on a dress or in the background, but with the majority of them I spend a lot of time drawing. Once the drawing is done, I pierce the photo with a set of needle-like tools I invented and take the paper away; the holes are obsessively paced at the same distance to convey an idea of geometry. When I begin the stitching something else happens, drawing will never do what thread will."
The way Anzeri re-appropriates vintage photos is not dissimilar to John Stezaker's work, and there are echoes (but none of the torment) of the singular vision of Francis Bacon with the weird distortion and blur of the subjects, but he has found an interesting way of making a photograph - something usually associated with numbered print-runs and editions - into a singular, fascinating object.


Priscilla, 1940, 2008


Edward, 1943, 2009


Title unknown


Title unknown


Zelda, 1941, 2009


Round Midnight, 2009


Title unknown


Penny, 2009


Giovanni, 2009



Title unknown


All images © Maurizio Anzeri





Monday, 17 January 2011

Lucas Foglia



New Year, new talent:
Having only graduated from Yale last year, Lucas Foglia's work is ridiculously confident and mature for someone who's only twenty seven. Foglia has realised two serious projects, Re-Wilding and Between Mountain And Mines, which look at two different types of rural American life. Re-Wilding follows people who've made a conscious effort to leave the modern world, and quit towns and cities to live a more pastoral existence off the grid in parts of Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee. His shots, beautifully composed, show amazing scenes of this modern rural life, from women learning to shoot rifles, to kids milking cows, to dead animals lying slain in the woods. Riveting, moving and sometimes sinister, Re-Wilding is a great achievement. The photographs feel part-documentary, part Crewdson-esque complicated set up, and the viewer is not entirely sure if what they are seeing is true. Foglia says this of his working process: "I take candid photographs, but often ask my subjects to hold still or alter their actions for the sake of a better visual image. I also work collaboratively with my subjects to recreate events that I have observed, occasionally re-photographing and compositing different images. My process of making images varies; what matters to me is the form and content of the final image"
Between Mountains And Mines explores communities based in Wyoming in one of the largest areas of undeveloped land in the Unites States. Foglia once more captures some images of real beauty in a harsh environment, showing an understanding eye for his subjects who have chosen to live somewhere where wilderness and the indutrial world meet.
There's many parallels in both series, showing intrepid types who have chosen a more difficult but perhaps more rewarding way of living today. Foglia has found fertile subject matter in these modern day pioneers, and it will be interesting to see where he turns his camera next.

From the Re-Wilding series


From the Re-Wilding series


From the Re-Wilding series


From the Re-Wilding series


From the Re-Wilding series



From the Re-Wilding series


From the Between Mines And Mountains series


From the Between Mines And Mountains series


From the Re-Wilding series


From the Between Mines And Mountains series


From the Between Mines And Mountains series


From the Between Mines And Mountains series



From the Re-Wilding series


From the Re-Wilding series


All images © Lucas Foglia