LONDON.- This spring, New York artist Zoe Leonard (b. 1961) will transform Gallery 3 at
Camden Arts Centre into a camera obscura. Daylight will filter in through a lens projecting an image of the world outside onto the floor, walls and ceiling, creating a spatially immersive experience. Alongside this, Gallery 1 will be filled with a new series of photographs depicting the sun together with a sculptural installation of found images in Gallery 2. Across all the galleries this major exhibition engages three distinct forms of photography experience, image, object and in doing so pushes at the boundaries of photography as practice and medium. Zoe Leonard: Observation Point runs at Camden Arts Centre from 31 March 24 June and admission is free.
The experience of Leonards camera obscura is durational in a way that invites comparisons with film and video. As the ephemeral panorama unravels continually inside the space the viewers attention is drawn to the shifts in movement and light some dramatic, others barely perceptible. The north-south axis of Gallery 3 will provide constant light throughout the day, giving rise to a continually shifting, cinematic event. Leonard is harnessing the phenomenon of the camera obscura to think about ways of looking, recording and experiencing time and space as well as broadening current conversations about what photography is or can be.
Leonards new series of photographs of the sun defies one of the cardinal rules of traditional photography - not to shoot into the sun and challenges the possibilities of photographic representation. Photography customarily depicts the colour, form and spatial extension that the light of the sun allows us to discern, rather than the sun as subject itself. These images combine subject and process, retaining the glare and flare on the lens, the grain of the film in the enlarged print and the evidence of the artists work in the darkroom. The third work, an installation of found postcards, continues Leonards practice of attending to the world around her as a source of material, reframing or representing already existing images so as to refresh our own act of looking.
Tying all Leonards work together is her constant concern with perception and visual experience. Leonard explores photographic seeing, how we relate to the mediated image and how we perceive the world around us and that affects our emotional, political, or psychological experience.
The camera obscura (meaning dark chamber), predates photography, and is a natural phenomenon. From ancient times until the 18th century it was used as a tool by draftsmen, artists, architects and scientists to understand perspective and the physical laws of light. In this way, the camera obscura connects photography not only to the physical sciences, but to drawing, painting and architecture.
Zoe Leonard
Zoe Leonard (b. 1961, New York) is a New Yorkbased artist working with photography, sculpture, and installation. A retrospective exhibition originated at the Fotomuseum Winterthur, Switzerland,(2007), and travelled to Museo Nacional Reina Sofía, Madrid (2008); the Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich (2008); and Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig, Vienna (2009). Other solo exhibitions have taken place at Dia:Beacon, Beacon, New York (2008 11); Dia at the Hispanic Society, New York (2008); Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, Ohio (2007); Vienna Secession (1997); and Kunsthalle Basel (1997). Leonard participated in Documenta 9 (1992) and Documenta 12 (2007), and Whitney Biennials in 1993 and 1997. Recent publications include Analogue (2007 MIT press), Zoe Leonard: Photographs (2008 Steidl), and You see I am here after all (2010 Dia). She lives and works in New York City, USA.