This is London, Bank Holyday Edition 23
May 2014,
Issue 2896
HAY
HILL GALLERY: TWO CONTEMPORARY PHOTOGRAPHERS
For the next three weeks, Hay Hill Gallery is to present the
extraordinary worlds of two contemporary photographers.
Marco Sanges is the fantastic storyteller who creates his
photographic narratives in cinematic sequences. In 'The Indecent
Eye’, the distortion of Sanges’ silvered lens suggests that all is
meaningless, nothing has purpose.
Within such surreal walls, logical arguments fall into nonsense;
eloquent speech collapses into gobbledegook and the inevitable
outcome is silence. As a result, the subjects are trapped in cruelly
endless mimes, menaced relentlessly by incomprehensible outside
forces. Borrowing stylistically from the silent movies of the 1920s
and 30s, the players gesture helplessly from the other side of their
screens. Aghast, afraid, astonished, their expressions are
enormously exaggerated.
Darkly enchanting, these photographs are touching in their depiction
of human frailty and strength. Once the metaphysical rug is whipped
out from under your feet, you are forced to come to a conclusion,
make your own mistakes and see the funny side. Suddenly, you too are
part of the picture, rooted to the spot, wildly gesturing and making
peculiar faces. Afterwards you might scratch your head and wonder
what just happened, but Sanges is a magician, an unhinged puppet
master with a camera. As you step back out into the June afternoon,
come rain or shine, you may feel you’ve a touch of sunstroke - but
it’s only your mind playing tricks on you again.
Having been unsettled by Sanges, you may wish to re-orient yourself
in the photographs of architect Alexey Lyubimkin: 'City/Lights'.
Like love letters to the cities he encounters, he unfolds the lines
of trees and buildings as though they were simply blueprints of the
original city design. His lens is a magnifying glass that
scrutinises the things our naked eye cannot see, presenting the ever
changing landscapes. Lyubimkin’s visions borrow from the old
technique of tinting images but use a modern myriad of solero hues.
This preoccupation with colour emphasises the importance of noticing
beauty even to a rat race during rush hour. If we were to look up
from the pavement for just one moment, we might spot a street lamp
glancing off the gutter at a perfect angle, or see how branches
transform the sky into a stained glass window.
Whether we love or hate where we live, we subconsciously give
ourselves context by our perceived relationship to it. Working out
how it all fits together, and then how to live within that space
brings a sense of belonging. If we are not present to our
surroundings at all then we will always feel at odds - and be
homesick wherever we go. This artist gets us standing in place to
marvel at those shapes around us, and find out our personal
geometry. Rolling out the bridges and streets under our feet like
carpets, Lyubimkin invites us in to become an important part of the
picture, and to finally feel like we're home.
On view at Hay Hill Gallery, 35 Baker Street, W1, from 27 May until
21 June. Telephone 020 7935 5315 or online at www.hayhillgallery.com |