Marcel Sitcoske
Gallery is proud to present a group exhibition, ATTACK:
ATTRACTION, that explores the dialogue between painting
and photography. The show will coincide with the Gerhard Richter
retrospective at the SF MoMA.
Painting and photography have long had a complementary if somewhat
adversarial relationship. Even before photography’s inception,
artists such as Vermeer and Dürer used a camera obscura to
achieve a highly sought after verisimilitude in their work. Since
its creation, however, photography has been seen as a threat to
painting’s hegemony over accurate reproduction, while at the
same time, it has liberated painting from representational demands.
Photography was originally informed a great deal by painting but
as it has become a more accepted art form over the past century,
it has come to have a greater influence on painting. Painters are
now attracted to photography not only for its exactness but also
for its ability to capture atmosphere. This influence is apparent
in Angelina Nasso’s paintings of refracted light. She paints
from what could be called abstract photographs that she takes herself
of light blurred through an unfocused lens or rainy window.
Conversely, contemporary painting, freed from the burden of realistic
representation, has come to influence photography in new ways. Artists
like Hiroshi Sugimoto make photographs that bear similarities to
abstract paintings. Though flat, his work has texture and depth,
nuances of color and tonality that evoke movement. The photographs
of Stephen Dean and Anne Deleporte are also reminiscent of abstract
paintings, as bursts of color obliterate more recognizable forms
underneath.
In Gerhard Richter’s work, 128 Details from a Picture, the
crossover between media is literal. He has taken a partly-blurred,
partly-focused photograph of one of his paintings and painted on
the photograph itself. This serves to highlight how the relationship
between painting and photography is now one between two mediums
that are constantly influencing each other in new and challenging
ways.
Artists include: Leo Bersamina, Stephen Dean, Anne Deleporte, Richard
Galpin, Fabian Marcaccio, Vik Muniz, Angelina Nasso, Patti Oleon,
Carter Potter, Gerhard Richter, Michal Rovner, Susan Silton and
Hiroshi Sugimoto.