Las Luisas, by Bellomo...
10:55 p.m.
19/09/19 - Javier Bellomo Coria (the last last name belongs to his mother and he decided to use it) photographed the fleeting face of one woman (or maybe three, we can't tell) in a moving canvas. The result is a disintegrated image, with an undefined expression.
Las Luisas, by Javier Bellomo Coria
Technique: print in several layers of different fabrics
Sasha D Espacio de Arte - Feria MAC, Córdoba
As we said, the canvas is not rigid, so to the lightest breeze, it moves, making the image rather ghostly. That's precisely when, in front of “Las Luisas”, the words Roland Barthes wrote in “Camera Lucida” define the moment: "I observed that a photograph can be the object of three practices (or of three emotions, or of three intentions): to do, to undergo, to look. The Operator is the Photographer. The Spectator is ourselves, all of us who glance through collections of photographs- — in magazines and newspapers, in books, albums, archives . . . And the person or thing photographed is the target, the referent, a kind of little simulacrum, any eidolon emitted by the object, which I should like to call the Spectrum of the Photograph, because this word retains, through its root, a relation to "spectacle" and adds to it that rather terrible thing which is there in every photograph: the return of the dead“.
0 comentarios