By Prof. Jürgen Klauke
Tamara Lorenz is a photo artist who has over time dealt adeptly
with incorporating other media. Indeed, her works open themselves
up in the form of photos, yet one can hardly speak of the plate
as in the sense of classic photography. She often opens, closes
orconvolutes the pictorial plane through sculptural intervention
in front of the camera.
In such a way for example, an installation with a wall full of colorful,
differently shaped and sized plastic bags becomes convictable through
the abstract picturesque qualities of the photographic medium. Clearly
composed clumps of color, some blazingly full, others sleepily drooping
as though they were slowly deflating, some laminar and pale, some
loud and plastic. A score of life. The counterpart to this picture
swallows the room almost entirely, opening up into the unbounded.
Black, airfilled trashbags, whose real dimension is barely recognizable,
allow their form to be recognized only through a few minimal, sharply
drawn light contours.
Already in her work The Half of Life Itself she was creating pseudo
casual composition with plastic bags, wooden laths, chairs, a table,
a fan, cables and other calm protagonists of everyday life, setting
them into light as if they were staging a secret theatre behind
closed doors – a tragic comedy of objecthood as a persiflage
of personhood. The themes of Lorenz’s pictures are based upon
experienced affections of social cooperation and human lonliness
and for this reason appear to be familiar. For example the stored,
airfilled plastic bags in a precisely arranged in a shelf. The fastidious
organization and the hollowness of the replacement stock seem to
reveal the need for safety as laughable. Or the gray bags, which
stand across from one another in two accurate rows like image and
effigy, original and emulation – the copy of the copy of the
copy. The absent bags hold steady and stubborn in their conformist
posture.
In her newest group of work Pragmatic Principles Tamara Lorenz places
diverse older and newer wooden laths together in idiosyncratic constructions.
They lay unnailed and unscrewed beside each other until the artist
transforms them into another playful and unpretentious photo. Under
the Phenotype for example there are open and closed compositions,
supple and aggressive, complex and reduced forms, congenial and
incongenial characters – mindful portraits, which somehow
involuntarily remind one of situations or persons. Through the particularly
chosen camera angle emerge frequent overlappings of perspective,
spatial dislocation, shadow plays and other optical irritation,
in which fotographed sculptures become reduced drawings within a
space.
If one sees Tamara Lorenz’s work as small illustrations, one
could think that the photos were merely documentation of an installation.
Lorenz reaches a further, rather casual irritation of meaning through
this manouvre, in which the picture as such simply questions the
meaning behind the mode. Often enough, not only mass-produced articles
but also artistic works which appear in photographic form seem more
impressive in a catalog as in real life. To opt for the photograph
as the final form for a work is a ecision she has made in order
to play with the means of the medium, to spit out its optical idiosyncracies
when the room offers itself as a flat surface. The prescribed perspective
refuses the entirety of the experience and concentrates on the observer’s
presentiment. Beyond the distance of the photo to the constructed
image there arises a moment of transcendence and longing. There
is no rustling of a bag dispersed through momentary passing, no
lath constructions that fall aloud within themselves. The materials,
known from the house and the yard, staged in absurdity, lose their
visual examination of inconsolable banality through this distance
and develop an independent consciousness, let loose of their roll
of functionality. They become abstracter through photography and
more independent in their Mise en Scène.
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