Angie Buckley Photography
by Valerie Valentine
Human histories are told in stories passed
from one generation to the next. The telling can come in the form
of written traditions, oral traditions or song. In the twentieth
and twenty-first centuries, we have photographs, and more recently,
home video, to capture our families’ chronicles. In addition
to all this, families share genetic codes that link physical traits
and personality characteristics.
Delving even deeper, some scientists claim
that our DNA carries collective memories and formative experiences.
The experiments of Angie Buckley’s photography explore the
literal and mystical side of ancestry through visual expression,
grounding these abstract interpretations of the past and present
to geography.
Place is a huge determining factor for
group identity. Buckley acknowledges locality by placing her subjects
in vast, sprawling landscapes. Mostly the artist uses cutouts of
existing photographs, shrinking the human figures to tiny, fairy-like
proportions, or enlarging them to life-size. These cutouts are then
situated within a specific locale.
In “Virtue,” a teensy photo
cutout figure holding an axe is placed among vegetation. The original
photo from which the cutout was taken floats in the foreground.
It appears that the figure is going to liberate her sister from
the photo, and then the little pair will axe the forest. The suggestion
is humorously absurd, with a serious undertone about the major destructive
impact that humans (a “tiny” percentage of the world’s
life forms) have wrought on the greatness of the natural world.
In “He Closed His Eyes,” a
cutout of a man in traditional dress holds two large fish at the
edge of a modern swimming pool. The historical costume juxtaposes
wildly with the slick edges of the glimmering pool and contemporary
architecture of the building beyond it. This contrast suggests that
throughout the years lives and circumstances may vary, but the past
lives on within each succeeding generation. Further, the context
of a man fishing from a purified, chlorinated pool is laughable.
Buckley notes the gradual transition from laborers to leisure class,
as well as the environment’s modification from organic and
natural to man-made and sterile.
Buckley’s technique playfully experiments
with dimension, exposure and focus. As with any experimental series,
some photographs succeed and some struggle for meaning. The ones
that work are carefully constructed, with an eye on detail. The
blurred ghosts of the more abstract images still haunt the mind’s
corners, however. Buckley exhibits work with a solid thematic core
that’s easily applied to the lives of her audiences.
Angie Buckley Photography runs through June 1
at Larson Art Gallery, U of M, St. Paul Campus, 2017 Buford Ave.,
St. Paul, 612-625-0214. Gallery hours until May 12 are Mon.–Wed.
10 a.m.–3 p.m.; Thu. 10 a.m.–8 p.m. & Fri. 10 a.m.–4
p.m. Closed Saturday and Sunday. Beginning May 16 gallery hours
are Mon.–Wed. 10 a.m.–3 p.m.; Thu. noon–6 p.m.
& Fri. 10 a.m.–3 p.m. Closed Saturday and Sunday. |