Bite! magazine » A Metaphor Of Idleness, Ambiguity And Disruption

Anahuac Monuments by Oswaldo Ruiz  (December 13, 2009)

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General Statement by Juan Antonio Molina Cuesta
This week I will show you seven artists, who are emerging in the Mexican photography scene. This is a cross cultural context in which the traditional borders of national identity are constantly transgressed. A static or homogeneous definition of this socio-cultural space is difficult due to the diversity of the subject matter of these photographers. Oscar Fernando Gómez’s photos are linked to his own experience as a taxi driver. For him taking photos is a part of the everyday life and it is something almost peripheral to the conventional art languages. Andrés Carretero, Omar Gámez and Alinka Echeverría research their subject and produce documentary work focused on uncommon subjects and environments, similar to what an anthropologist or social scientist would do, but making the most of their own aesthetically sofisticated visions. Complex space and time narratives are constructed by Oswaldo Ruiz, Mauricio Alejo and José Carlos Jurado, for whom the finest formal structure is a key to suggest their conceptual and philosophical concerns. This variety of aesthetic proposals match the wide range of nuances which make up the contradictory contemporary visual culture in Mexico and abroad. Juan Antonio Molina Cuesta is curator at Centro de la Imagen, Mexico City. [popup url="http://www.theblacksnapper.net/news"]Click this link to get the latest international photography news and related articles (popup)[/popup]
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Poll results
Our poll "A photo essay always needs a great written story" closed. 267 people voted, 28% agrees, 72% disagrees. 233 people answered our follow-up question "Are you a photographer?" 82% indicated they are, 18% said no. Initially, negative answers to question #1 were almost 100% as was the pecentage of photographers among respondants. Then, when the level of non-photographers started to rise, the percentage of people indicating good text is always essential started to rise too. This seems to indicate that non-photographers think that adding good text to your photo essays is essential. In my opinion: if you want non-photographers to dig your work, you know what to do...

Artist Testimonial

The work presented here is a series of photographs of abandoned houses in Anahuac, on the north of Mexico. I have lit up the houses at night, as if they were monuments, marking its sculpture characteristics making a theatrical view of the human drama lived there. I analyze through photography their aesthetic categories and their qualities as documents and ruins. In this work I was interested in portraying a disappearing way of life through these images, and how that impacted the use of land. One of the houses was of the sister of my grandfather. The people had to flew to other areas after a drought of several years, that made impossible to keep working the fields.

My practice consists in using photography and video as a tool to experiment with the narrative aspect of images. For the past four years I have been exploring with the use of light in night scenes, portraying simple and functional spaces in the outside of big cities. Places that give a filling of perplexity or enigma, where light plays a very important part. Using it as a metaphor of meaning and human reason, I contrast it with the unknown or uncanny of the deep black surroundings. I stage a scene of transcendental anonymity; exploring ways to communicate with the narrativity of our unconscious, and the way it works deciphering the images we consume.

I have used a set of movable light devices that I convey to the places to be photographed. The devices are included in the final image of spaces or landscapes. The light becomes then the media that allow us to see what there is in the real world. I’m exaggerating the common phenomenon of light and seeing, making a re-enactment of those processes through photography, contrasting light with the deep black night, as the wilderness. The landscapes or spaces erupt from nothingness as an image of human meaning, as deliriant architecture, questioning the barrier we tend to set between nature and knowledge.

I’m also interested in using the political charge of the spaces. The work presented here is an example of that approach. Peasants are forced to leave their houses because of the lack of agricultural politics against voracious transnational companies, that absorb all the resources available. The people have to move out to bigger cities or to the USA, leaving behind the houses they own. These houses are subsequently taken over by the wilderness, a few years later, they are all covered in grass. The light devices spot them as a discovery, like contemporary ruins; showing the human leftovers of political decisions.

I’m interested in how light works as an instrument that defines a place and charges it with a meaning. As a narrative consequence of the arrangement of the light, the place portrayed, immediately becomes safe or dangerous, populated or wild. There is a threat of something wrong about to happen that never arrives but tints the scene of awareness and narration. The idea is to set an ambiguous atmosphere where reality and staged fiction collapse together. The night becomes thus a metaphor of idleness, ambiguity and disruption.

Oswaldo Ruiz on the web: oswaldoruiz.com.


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