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Luminous, and grand in scale, Vera Lutter's
camera obscura photographs explore the continued possibilities
of the photographic medium, whilst meditating on how time may
be captured, manipulated and represented as
image.
Using a technique born with the first
explorations into photography in the 17th Century, the camera
obscura works with the basic premise that when light passes
through a small hole into a darkened room, it produces an
inverted image on the opposite wall. Transforming rooms into
cameras, and often inhabiting them during the length of each
exposure, Lutter projects her subjects onto large-scale
photo-sensitised paper and develops them as unique negatives.
Lutter considers the camera's transcription as the ultimate
representation, only inverting the upside-down negative to
form a more readable image.
The resulting monumental
photographs capture the trace movements of her subjects over
the duration of each exposure, sometimes hours, sometimes
days. Challenging the perception of a photograph as a frozen
instant, they reflect a transitional process which links her
work with the early time-based video work by artists such as
Andy Warhol and Bruce Nauman.
Conceptually and
instinctively Lutter is drawn to the urban environment,
particularly to places with some historical or iconic
resonance. From the Kvaerner shipyards in Rostock, to
Frankfurt Airport, to the skyscrapers of New York and Chicago,
to the Pepsi-Cola sign in Long Island City, Lutter's subjects
are defined by an overwhelming sense of reverie and
tranquility. The long length of exposure filters out all
incidental movement leaving only the "visual echoes" of time's
passing. All subsidiary detail is removed, and only the
essential remains.
Kate Zamet August 2002
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