PARIS.- To open its autumn 2022 program,
Galerie Miranda announces a two-person exhibition by celebrated American artists Jo Ann Callis (b. 1940) and Jan Groover (b.1943-d.2012), both at the heart of the 1970s American new color school of photography. The Paris exhibition will feature selected vintage and contemporary color prints from the landmark series 'Early Color' (1976) by Callis and 'Kitchen Still Lifes' (1979) by Groover. Working at the peak of the American women's liberation movement, neither artist specifically declared themselves to be feminist artists yet both were producing works within and about their home environment, in the vein of militant feminist artists such as Martha Rosler (Semiotics of the Kitchen, 1975) and Judy Chicago (The Dinner Party, 1974-9).
Jo Ann Callis (née en 1940)
In Los Angeles in the 1970s, Jo Ann Callis was juggling two young children, numerous home moves, night school and a pending divorce. Despite these obstacles, she worked constantly to produce her seminal series 'Early Color'. Influenced notably by Paul Outerbridge but also Hans Bellmer and Pierre Molinier, her cinematographic scenes capture the tensions and anxiety of a claustrophobic domestic environment where freedom, pleasure and curiosity are bridled. Hitchcockian by their exquisite composition, Callis created all the decors for the series that she photographed for the most part in her converted Los Angeles garage, with friends as models and the domestic objects at hand as props - string, tape, sheets, lamps, sand, honey and her householdchairs,tablesandplants.
Similarly, for her celebrated Kitchen Still Life'series, Jan Groover created poetry out of a kitchen sink piled up with fork tines, butter knife blades, scalloped cake tins and indoor plants. In 1979 an image from this series graced the cover of ArtForum magazine: according to critic Andy Grundberg, it announced that photography had arrived in the artworld - complete with a marketplace to support it."
Jan Groover (1943-2012)
At that time of Egglestons 1976 exhibition, both Callis and Groover were also producing intimist color photography. Trained in fine art, both artists had already explored a range of forms and languages: Jan Groover had worked as an abstract painter until her 30s; Callis also painted and introduced other elements into her compositions, such as screen printing, clay sculpture and textiles; they each explored black & white photography and used Polaroids throughout their careers. Whilst taking different formal paths, Callis and Groovers works share several features: both cite for example Italian painter Giorgio Morandi (1890-1964) and the calm hues of his 'flat' still lives, as a central influence; they both prepared their fabricated compositions in minute detail before taking the final photograph and, in his preface to the 1992 Jan Groover monograph, John Szarkowski writes that her training as a painter "disposed her to think of a picture as something that was made, not discovered." Similarly, Judith Keller, Senior Photography Curator at the J. Paul Getty Museum, quotes Callis: The photograph is highly structured, so you dont think it is a real home or a real room, but a room made to evoke something. It's a room in your mind. (preface to the 2009 publication Jo Ann Callis: Woman Twirling).