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From:
Camerawork:
A Journal of Photographic Art-Timekeepers, Volume 27, No.
1, Spring/Summer 2000, [pp. (-18), (+18), (+19)]
"The Bends"
by Glen Helfand
where are we?
It looks like we're
standing on the roof and feeling a bit woozy. The view up here
gives everything a new perspective. The parked cars seem like
shiny toys with miniature accessories visible inside their hatchback
windows. The street lanes are delineated with horizontal marks
that resemble lines on a chalkboard. Foliage bridges the boulevard,
arching form the stately building across the street. You might
notice the ornate architectural details on the building, which
are not as cohesive as they initially appear. It's as if two structures
were grafted together, abruptly but almost seamlessly. Not only
that, but as we look down, the building presents itself with full
frontal exposure, as if the street had folded down the middle.
where were we?
The title of the Kathryn
Dunlevie piece just described is an address: One Lexington
Avenue. It looks like Manhattan, but not the one we're used
to. She renders the setting with a bunch of conjoined pieces,
a collage of time and place. "Dissolving" and "sliding askew"
are two terms she uses to describe her images, and they are two
concepts that warp our perceptions. Dunlevie appears to subscribe
to the postmodern notion that time no longer follows a linear
sequence, images with history are part of the present, and the
future is predicated on the past. Fred Astaire dances with vacuum
cleaners he's never touched in commercials made years after his
death. Dunlevie pulls her images from various locations, times
of day, and perhaps even eras. Some are photographic, some rendered
by hand. Sometimes one seems like the other. She smooths the lines
between media and memory as she reconfigures space. Her work is
a manifestation of the kind of bendable subjective viewpoints
that have become a staple of the modern moment.
and time keeps
on slipping into the future.
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