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| LISA
KLAPSTOCK THRESHOLD |
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The subject of my
work is overlooked environments in the city – everyday spaces that are
somewhat unfamiliar and marginally inhabited, but nevertheless imprinted
with the ‘residue’ of human presence. I am interested in re-framing and
revealing the 'invisible', and in turn drawing attention to the act of
looking and seeing. Since 1998, I have focused on the laneways around my
downtown Toronto neighborhood, using macroscopic photography to document surface
fragments of this environment. This 5-year project was an investigation of a
discrete and relatively hidden place in the city. Since 2001, my recent work
is concerned with spatial relationships, particularly relating to the figure
in space and to the delineation of public and private spaces in the city. Threshold
is a series of 28 color photographs that depict boundaries – walls, gates,
doors, and fences – and the fragmented views glimpsed through gaps and
holes in their surfaces. These images were shot from the public space of
Toronto laneways looking into the private space of residential backyards. In this work, I am
interested in the way that the particularities of photography can draw
attention to the act of looking and to the limitations of vision.
Facilitated by photography, boundary and space are simultaneously rendered
as a single surface. The foreground and background coalesce in a
single flattened view that is part abstract color field and part sharply
focused scene, reducing the apparent separation between surface and space;
outside and inside; public and private realms. |
farsightedness, where the foreground is blurred
but apparent in its full spectral and textural glory, and the background is
in sharp detailed focus. Each work is
presented like an object excised from reality – a piece of wall cut from
its context along with the view that can be glimpsed through the aperture. I
am also interested in the way the surface aperture evokes the camera by
acting like a camera lens through which a scene is framed. Each
uniquely shaped aperture frames and reveals a scene distinctly, intimately
tying the scene to the host surface through its aperture. - Lisa Klapstock, 2003 Lisa Klapstock is a Toronto-based artist who has exhibited in Canada, the U.S., and Europe at commercial, non-profit, and public galleries as well as in alternative venues. In the summer of 2002, Klapstock was an artist-in-residence at Stichting Duende in Rotterdam, The Netherlands. She is a founding member of the all-woman international artist collective Fresh Air, and is represented in Canada by Diane Farris Gallery, Vancouver. Upcoming exhibitions include solo shows in the Odense Foto Triennial, Denmark, and at Centre Vu in Quebec City; and group shows at Vancouver’s Presentation House Gallery and the Contemporary Art Forum in Kitchener, Ontario. For more information: www.lisaklapstock.com |
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