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Allan deSouza’s Orientalism

October 15th, 2007 Jason Parker Posted in Artist Talk, Review, Theory No Comments »

by Rebecca Stern

Allan deSouza has incorporated a variety of differing tools in his photography/mixed media. His lecture Rituals in Transfigured Time, presented at Savannah College of Art and Design-Atlanta on October 3, showcased many different series of his works. DeSouza described both the techniques he used as well as more in-depth interpretations that focused on the unwritten histories hidden in the images.

His series Threshold includes 24 images of airports, train and bus stations. The series focused on waiting areas and transitions between places in time where one has left behind the familiar, but has not yet arrived at the new venue. DeSouza mentioned that he wanted the viewers to imagine a first encounter with a new place and how they might emotionally engage with the physical space presented. The goal of the work is to demonstrate the promise of the West and this goal is achievable if we use Orientalism as the primary interpretation tool.

Orientalism can be loosely defined as the study of Far Eastern cultures by Westerners. Edward Said calls into question the very definition of Orientalism by pondering this fundamental assumption. “The interpreter’s mind actively makes a place in it for a foreign Other. And this creative making of a place for works that are otherwise alien and distant is the most important facet of the interpreter’s mission.” (Said, Orientalism, 25 Years Later, 2003) DeSouza’s artwork tries to show the relation between the East and West in his subtle imagery.

In his series In search of divine, deSouza searches for the hidden essence of a divine presence in the mundane components of ordinary existence. He relies on the viewer to ask, “What am I looking at?” and anticipates that the viewer will be capable of seeing beyond the ordinary and approach the divine essence present in the objects. In many of his photographs, deSouza’s own body provides the key elements - blood, hair, earwax, toenails and fingernails - and challenges the viewer to see behind the physical reality of these objects.

DeSouza uses these materials because they are organic and will eventually decompose, decay and disintegrate. He creates spaces that might look epic and immense, yet are really the opposite. He asks, “What does it mean to the viewer to be confronted with a landscape that is made out of blood?” Using his shavings, his bodily fluids and discarded parts acts as a form of cleansing and purification for him, yet might be dirty and contaminating for another. Perhaps this technique enables him to focus on the differences in the perceptions and appearances of the body in the various geographic locales of his images. Our social space is marked by the way we move within it. DeSouza elaborates on the process of the movement.

A video interview with the artist is here.

Stern is an MFA candidate in photography at SCAD-Atlanta.

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One-liners that Keep on Giving

October 8th, 2007 Art Relish Posted in Interview, Painting, Review, Video No Comments »

Joseph Peragine “Forever and Ever” at Solomon Projects
October 5-November 3
by Bolivanni Solvacinni

The large paintings Joseph Peragine completed in only two months for Friday’s opening at Solomon Projects are a refreshing and heroic mix of Modernistic beauty and Post-Modern kitsch.

The sense of light emanating from the works is reminiscent of the 19th Century Luminists while the flat silhouettes of technological advances such as an 18-wheeler truck and electric towers recall a sensibility similar to Ed Rusche’s road iconography. Joe’s sense of humor isn’t overshadowed by an undercurrent of vast desolation and an infinite sense of hope the American wanderlust condition usually undergoes.

The blatant “forever and ever” reads as a marquis mantra for the Hollywood made American and I inwardly giggle at the saccharine idealism. So much about America is expressed with very few icons: the open road, mobile privatization and car culture, big sky and Western migration, the belief in a technological panacea, self determination and the American Dream. The works also address the shallow surface on which we base our ideas of success and the empty promise our endeavors keep traveling towards to uphold.

Forever and Ever is a dark and ominous reminder that our culture travels towards the ends without much consideration for the means.

Video Interview with the Artist

Susan Hadorn interviews Joseph Peragine at the opening.

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