The Met Museum Presents FATAL ATTRACTION: PIOTR UKLANSKI PHOTOGRAPHS, Now thru 8/16
Fatal Attraction: Piotr Ukla?ski Photographs at The Metropolitan Museum of Art will be the first survey of this provocative artist's photography. Known for working in a wide variety of media including installation, fiber art, resin paintings, and collage, Ukla?ski (born 1968) invests overlooked and exhausted styles with new meanings. This Polish-born, New York-based artist similarly explores clichéd or obsolete photographic languages. Nearly half of the works on display in the Metropolitan Museum's exhibition will be from The Joy of Photography (1997-2007), the artist's seminal yet under-known series, in which he adopted the hackneyed subjects and styles of Eastman Kodak's 1979 how-to book for amateur photographers to create a rapturous ode to the medium, both ironic and sincere.
Ukla?ski moved to the United States from Poland just after the fall of Communism, and found in Kodak's Joy of Photography a readymade compendium of American mass cultural taste and aspirations to which he enthusiastically submitted his photographs. Pitch-perfect mimicries of stock photography such as Untitled (Waterfall) from 2001 are important early examples of what would come to be known as "post-appropriation" in contemporary photography, and provide witty commentary-from a European perspective-on how Americans approach even their moments of pleasure as forms of work and self-improvement. For Untitled (Stockholm), Ukla?ski used a multiple-image lens to create a cartoon-vision of aesthetic rapture. The over-the-top sunset inUntitled (Yellow Sky) is as atavistic a subject of art as a waterfall, equally at home on giveaway calendars and great paintings of the past. (It is also the exact color of Kodak's trademark yellow.)Fatal Attraction: Piotr Ukla?ski Selects from the Met Collection
March 17-June 14, 2015
Accompanying the exhibition Fatal Attraction: Piotr Ukla?ski Photographs will be a lively "artist's choice" installation of works from the Museum's collection in The Howard Gilman Gallery (Gallery 852). Twenty works from 11 different curatorial departments and 60 works from the Department of Photographs will make connections to works in Fatal Attraction: Piotr Ukla?ski Photographs while providing an artist's surprising perspective on two elemental themes in the history of art: complicating Freud's dichotomy of life force (Eros) and death drive (Thanatos) by locating deathliness in the beautiful; and the perverse pull of the repellent. The selection-in which the artist largely forgoes the explicitly pornographic for a deeper, more poetic consideration of these intertwined concepts-ranges from the yellow jasper Fragment of a Queen's Face made in Egypt between ca. 1353 and 1336 B.C. to Laurie Simmons' menacing photograph Walking Gunfrom 1991. Fatal Attraction: Piotr Ukla?ski Photographs is organized by Doug Eklund, Curator in the Department of Photographs at the Metropolitan Museum. Fatal Attraction: Piotr Ukla?ski Selects from the Met Collection is organized by the artist, Doug Eklund, and Beth Saunders, Curatorial Assistant in the Department of Photographs.Education programs include gallery talks.Fatal Attraction: Piotr Ukla?ski Photographs and Fatal Attraction: Piotr Ukla?ski Selects from the Met Collection will be featured on the Museum's website, as well as on Facebook,Instagram and Twitter via the hashtag #PiotrUklanski.Photo Credit: Piotr Ukla?ski (born 1968), Untitled (Skull), 2000. Platinum print. Collection of the artist.
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