Wednesday, 20 January 2010

Bas Jan Ader work

When researching more thoroughly into Bas Jan Ader's work, I came across this webpage;

http://www.paperheart.org/imtoosad/

It features fans of his work, sending in photos of themselves,( or others who are close to them), crying as a sort of homage to him and his works.

This is the statement taken from the webpage;

"Crying is a powerful act; taking a photograph of oneself crying and putting it on the Internet is another matter entirely. It is a very specific cultural phenomenon and is in many ways much like a performance. As such, the title of this project is borrowed from a piece of the same name made by the Dutch performance artist Bas Jan Ader in 1970. His piece consisted of a silent 16mm short black and white film of himself crying uncontrollably with no explanation. Regardless of the authenticity of his tears, his grief is overwhelmingly real. It is at once hard to watch, mesmerizing, and beautiful.

"I'm Too Sad To Tell You (after Bas Jan Ader)" was originally conceived as a project to create an archive of self-portraits taken while crying. The images were to be displayed online on a website and then later made into a book. An open call was posted on the photo sharing community Flickr.com asking people to submit their crying self-portraits over the period of one month.

The website went online containing over 100 self-portraits, a third of which were found on Flickr searching through "tags" people attached to their images. A majority of the people who independently submitted images had Flickr accounts as well. Thus, the project also deals with the phenomenon of Flickr and other similarly structured websites using photographs as a form of communication. The "I'm Too Sad" website then becomes an attempt to give the images back some of their integrity as images by placing them in a clean non-communication based gallery format."


Among the page there are, of course, very weak images but also there are a few very strong, powerful images. These are a few of my favorite ones;


Zach Genin


Victor Ballestros


Mary Armour

I may consider taking this kind of approach to recreating my own series of work like Ader's.

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