Search for content, post, videos

Paul Mpagi Sepuya, Figures, Grounds and Studies

Preview

While deeply engaged with ideas about studio portraiture, this exhibition by photographer Paul Mpagi Sepuya, on view at Yancey Richardson Gallery, in New York (USA), frames the photographic process as an ongoing conversation and negotiation between the viewer, the artist, the subject and the work. Simultaneously, the photographer investigates the role of desire as a productive and critical force in the medium of photography.

Referencing artistic tropes of homoerotic studio photography, Paul Mpagi Sepuya comments on the medium as a process of constructive desire: the desire to photograph, to look and to touch. Using drapes or framing to partially obscure the sitter, the studio or the camera, he engenders in the viewer a longing to see what is hidden and implicates the viewer in the looking. Sepuya inserts himself into the images, appearing alternately in a fragmented self-portrait, obscured behind a camera or drape, or reaching into the frame to arrange a sitter, adjust a cloth, or point to the model. His presence is mediated through a self-conscious play of presentation and concealing, exploring surface and reflection, lens and mirror, touch and trace.

Paul Mpagi Sepuyaʼs photographs often contain images of previous work that is fragmented, conjoined, overlapping the camera lens or taped to the studio mirror into which he is shooting. He states that this approach “…allows me to hold, within the studio, all material as potential. Each enters into the frame of another within a chain of productions, revision, destruction and re-production.” Eschewing digital technology, Sepuya uses the mirror to collapse the studio space into one plane, allowing him to integrate the subject, the camera tripod and prints of earlier images into a single layered, collage-like composition. Paul Mpagi Sepuyaʼs sitters are friends, lovers, writers and other artists who occupy a charged intersection of the creative, social and sexual spheres in the queer community. The relationships that exist across these “shared subjects,” as Sepuya calls them, and the resulting images serve as an organizing principle for the editing and configuration of their exhibition.

Paul Mpagi Sepuya, Figures, Grounds and Studies
February 2 – March 18, 2017
Yancey Richardson Gallery
525 W 22nd St
New York, NY 10011
USA

http://www.yanceyrichardson.com/

Create an account or log in to read more and see all pictures.

Install WebApp on iPhone
Install WebApp on Android