Friday, August 2, 2013

The Artists

Binh Danh Danh has created a technique to use photosynthesis to print photographs on leaves. He has used this to great effect, creating haunting images of the Vietnam war, making is seem as if the war has been forever burned into the memory of the jungle. As an international event, the Vietnam war is something that will be recognized as a nation. Dahn's images in the gallery may cause Vietnamese to feel anguish and Americans to feel regret because of the fact that we identify ourselves by the groups to which we belong, groups as large as nations. This identifying with groups is one part of everything that makes us who we are and is well illustrated by the emotions that gallery viewers will feel.
Do Ho Suh – Do Ho Suh moved to the United States from South Korea. He puts a lot of emphasis on his roots in his work. He has done a number of households created in fabric (including his own childhood home) and work that has reflected both his South Korean heritage and his current residence in the USA. The piece presented in the gallery features signatures from 5000 people who have touched his life in some way, shaping his identity.

Carrie Mae Weems – Weems’ photographs focus on a number of the parts of what create a person’s identity. She promotes cultural awareness through much of her work, specifically for African American communities. In her series entitled Kitchen Table, however, Weems is shown in a number of different situations at the same table. The series shows how our identity changes from one situation to the next even though everything else remains the same.

Sophie Calle – A performance artist who has been called, “an intellectual striptease,” Calle made a number of perhaps unintentional investigations into what creates a person’s identity. In her work The Address Book, she used all of an unknown person’s contacts to create an identity for him. In The Hotel, Calle spent three weeks as a housekeeper in a Venetian hotel. During this time she went through the belongings of those staying there and created dossiers on these people. The Hotel shows just how much of one’s identity can be defined by the items that one owns.

Gillian Wearing – Wearing, a photographer, is well known for her Signs That Say What You Want Them to Say and not Signs That Say What Someone Else Wants You to Say series and her self portraits that are done while wearing a mask of someone else’s face. Through the lens of identity, these photographs are in opposition to Calle’s work. They represent our internal identities, the way that we see ourselves. There is a mask that we show the world, our external identity, and then who we truly are underneath it.

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