Helsinki Report

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Last weekend, I visited Kiasma, Helsinki's contemporary arts museum. There are at least two large shows currently on display. Another Life is a collection of Finnish and other European outsider art and the other, Fractures of Life, is ostensibly about some ill-defined sense of political protest and/or bringing cultures together. Like a lot of contemprorary art, it's a mixed bag and detecting the curator's thematic intent is a bit like finding the face of the Madonna in a piece of toast - some see it and others don't. This second show contained a fair bit of photography, which was good since I did not get time to visit the Museum of Finnish Photography as I'd planned. The photographers participating in the Kiasma show exhibit global trends in photography, albeit with local subjects and interests.

miklosgaal.jpg

Miklos Gaál uses variations in depth of field and depth of focus to create large scale prints that deceive the viewer into thinking the subject is actually a miniature diorama rather than a life photograph. A View from the Edge has written recently on this trend, including a bit on Gaál. Erik's distressed about the simultaneous appearance of this technique in a number of emerging photographers, but I think its exciting to run across this sort of a pattern. Just based on the sheer number of people engaged in art photography worldwide coincidences such as this are inevitable. It's probably always been so, with a handful mastering the process and others being forgotten. The question always boils down to how masters the technique and then drives a thoughtful message through it.

juha-pekka.jpg

Two other photographers in the show - Ari Saarto and Juha-Pekka Inkenin (above) - mine a local vein similar to Alec Soth's work in the US. Saarto's work representated in the Kiasma show is "architectural" photographs of the ramshackle lean-tos constructed by the homeless. Inkinen catalogs deserted (at least temporarily) rooms piled with the detris of transitory residents. Like much of Soth's work these photographs are protraits in absence, hinting at the personalities of forgotten and ignored segments of society - this time from a Finnish perspective.

Coincidentally, I ran across a Chinese photography show on display at the Tennis Palace Art Museum (?!) when I arrived back in the US. I walked by the building at least twice.

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This page contains a single entry by Todd published on August 19, 2005 10:17 AM.

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Mavericks of Color Photography at Philly Museum of Art is the next entry in this blog.

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