BERGHOLZLI “If you have never been at sea in a heavy gale,” observed Edgar Allan Poe in his “A Descent into the Maelstrom”, “you can form no idea of the confusion of mind occasioned by the wind and spray together. They blind, deafen and strangle you, and take away all power of action and reflection.” (1) Poe’s description is an account as seen from the inside of the experience he describes. It is presented (even though within a work of fiction) as fact, as an unpleasantly intimate engagement with nature in one of its most inhospitable forms. Nadia Hebson’s paintings call up as one of many reference points the works of Poe, but one’s impression of her relation to the imagery she employs is that of someone who observes an incident, place or individual from a point at some distance from it. Whereas Poe writes as though his claim of personal experience guarantees something important about the occasion he describes, Hebson refrains from such recursive realistic constraints, instead presenting a series of images that appear to take us to locations to which it is unlikely that she herself has been. Painting at a time when photography is legion, Hebson’s variegated artistic output seems to imply that what Andre Malraux astutely called “the museum without walls” has turned us into gratuitous observers of anything and everything on an as it were a daily basis. (2) Her work acts to freeze the apparently relentless stream of photographic imagery so prevalent today, bringing the potential “criticality” of painting to bear upon an image-world whose very condition of repletion, of excess, promotes a deadening indifference to visual representations even as they multiply around us. In referring to painting’s critical effects I mean to suggest that a certain interesting and provocative distance is possible, through painting from, and as it were around the photograph and its various surrogates. Hebson’s substantial canvas Bergholzli (2007), a darkly mysterious work, is a case in point. Showing a large single-masted ship caught in what must soon be its final moments as it is dragged beneath the waters of an immensely stormy ocean, we are, as viewers, positioned as witnesses to disaster, to the final end of a vessel that is clearly from an earlier historical period than our own. If this were a painting by J M W Turner or Caspar David Friedrich we would recognise that the work must have been painted from actual observation of the vessel shown or from a similar craft, aided perhaps by sketches of the sea during storms, together with verbal or written reports by people who have actually seen, or even been on board a sinking ship. But because the painting is dated 2007 and the ship is not contemporary, something more complicated than direct observation must be assumed. Bergholzli looks to be a representation of a representation, a picture of another picture already extant in a museum or catalogue or book. It is a work that seemingly takes is point of departure from the naturalised position within our own time of photographic reproduction. Even if the work presents an imagined shipwreck it would appear to be one whose depiction is filtered through the imageworld of contemporary ideas about eighteenth or nineteenth century painting, readings only possible after photography’s invention and its widespread dissemination in our own time. (3)
Notes (2) “The museum without walls” is Andre Malraux’s term for the reproduction and dissemination in photographic form of works of art. See AM, The Voices of Silence, Secker & Warburg, 1954, section 1. (3) Hebson’s Bergholzli might also be regarded as fitting into the philosophical category of the sublime, one definition of which is the representation of extremes within nature, such as powerful storms at sea. The viewer of this work can experience the pleasure of observing horror and catastrophe from a comfortable and safe position outside the painting: this too is an experience associated with the sublime. (4) The phrase “absolutely modern” is from Arthur Rimbaud. Quoted in Malcolm Bradbury and James McFarlane, “The Name and Nature of Modernism”, in M Bradbury and J McFarlane (Eds.), Modernism, Penguin, 1981, p. 21. Peter Suchin is an artist, critic and curator. He contributes to Art Monthly, Art Review, Frieze, Mute and many other journals. This text was comissioned by Vane to accompany the solo exhibition Bergholzli, March 2007 |
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