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Joel-Peter Witkin: The World Is Not Enough

La Giovanissima, 2007, by Joel Peter-Witkin ©
La Giovanissima, 2007,
by Joel Peter-Witkin ©

Joel-Peter Witkin: The World Is Not Enough
December 10, 2016 – March 10, 2017
Opening: Saturday, Dec 10, 5-9pm
Lecture: Sunday, Dec 11, at THNOC’s Williams Research Center, 1pm

A Gallery for Fine Photography
241 Chartres Street
New Orleans, LA 70130
504-568-1313
Hours: Thursday-Monday, 10:30 am-5:00 pm

"Self Portrait," Joel Peter Witkin
“Self Portrait,” Joel Peter Witkin
About the artist:
Joel-Peter Witkin received a camera at the age of 15 after taking an introductory class in photography. After high school and jobs in New York color labs, he joined the military. Witkin studied at the Cooper Union School of Art and Architecture, where he earned his BA and the University of New Mexico, where he earned his MFA in 1986.

Witkin’s dark world view is expressed through painstakingly constructed photographs, alluding to the work of Henry Peach Robinson and Oscar Gustave Rejlander, who created the elaborately staged morality tale, The Two Ways of Life (1857). However, Witkin’s tableaux are dense with literary, art historical and religious references that pose moral challenges to the viewer. His images are inhabited by social outcasts, including dwarves, hermaphrodites, people with unusual physical capabilities or deformities, and mutilated corpses and amputated body parts from the dead, obtained from medical schools, insane asylums and morgues. The resulting photographs are simultaneously hauntingly beautiful and grotesque.

These images do not dwell in the modern world, but rather exist in a timeless place where the ages collide. Renaissance Madonnas and Venuses, Dutch still lifes, Mexican retablos, Caravaggio, William Blake, Courbet, Lucien Freud, Seurat, and Dali coexist in his photographs. Fragments of Etienne-Jules Marey’s nineteenth century motion studies and a nude study by French photographer Charles Nègre can also be found in his images. Witkin’s method of working harkens back to academically trained Renaissance painters. He carefully plans his tableaux, sketching their designs and arranging every detail before beginning work in the studio. These images must often be produced; and it is difficult to find models. Once in the studio, it can take up to two weeks to finish one photograph. He then reinvents it in his darkroom, where he makes the photograph into something virtually hand-made by scratching and even puncturing the negative. Printing is the final step in making the taboo and the grotesque seem sexually desirable and beautiful in Witkin’s world.

Joel-Peter Witkin’s photography has been featured in several monographs, including Joel-Peter Witkin, A Retrospective (1995); Harms Way (1994); Joel-Peter Witkin, Twelve Photographs in Gravure (1994) and Gods of Heaven and Earth (1989). His work is included in public collections such as The Museum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the J. Paul Getty Museum, The National Gallery, the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Centre Georges Pompidou. He is also the recipient of the Commandeur d’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres de France.

Image:
“La Giovanissima, 2007,”
by Joel Peter-Witkin ©
Paper size: 27 1/2” x 23 1/8”
Image size: 27 1/2” x 23 1/8”
Mount size: 27 1/2” x 23 1/8”
Medium: Silver Gelatin
Signed: Au verso the mount in Pencil

Posted on: Nov 11 2016
Posted in: December 10, Exhibitions, French Quarter, Galleries, PhotoNOLA 2016

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