|
Uta Barth:
The Long Now
Text
by Jonathan Crary, Holly Myers, Russell Ferguson.
Hardcover
384 pages, multiple gatefolds, Illustrated throughout
$75.00 (ISBN: 978-0-9800242-4--1)
|
|
Often
blurred or with only one element rendered sharply, clinging to the
margin of the composition, Uta Barth's deceptively simple photographs
of ordinary, ambiguous places are both elegant and challenging. Walls,
windows, patches of light on a rug, the glow of an out-of-focus glance
toward the horizon: all these provoke phenomenological reflections on
perception and subjectivity, often suspending a viewer in the midst of
the customary attempt to make sense of what is being seen, to reduce it
to an accessible package of associations and meaning. "Certain
expectations are unfulfilled: expectations of what a photograph
normally depicts, of how we are supposed to read the space in the
image, of how a picture normally presents itself on the wall," Barth
has said. "This kind of questioning and reorientation is the point of
entry and discovery, not only in a cognitive way, but in an almost
visceral, physical and personal sense."
This
comprehensive monographic volume presents a definitive overview of
Barth's works, fully illustrated with more than 300 full-color
reproductions, spanning from her earliest photographs to her most
recent. New texts by Russell Ferguson, former Chief Curator of the
Hammer Museum in Los Angeles; Holly Myers, art critic and writer; and
renowned scholar Jonathan Crary provide critical perspectives on the
work of this visionary artist.
Born
in Berlin in 1958, and now resident in Los Angeles, Uta Barth is
represented in the collections of The Museum of Modern Art, The
Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Guggenheim, the Whitney, the Museum of
Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and the Tate in London. In 2007 Barth was
named a Broad Art Foundation Fellow.
|