
Barbara Pollack
Sue (Close-Up)
1996

© ArtNet Worldwide 1997
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david ebony's new york top ten
Barbara Pollack
at Holly Solomon
Jan. 8-Feb. 8, 1997
Barbara Pollack's work constitutes a critique of photography's
conventional function as a representational tool. In the ten
extremely blurry portraits of friends and family members on
view here, the ghostly images bear only scant evidence of a
human subject. Having seen the artist at work, I can describe
part of her procedure. In her studio, she poses her subject
seated or standing, under intense lighting, usually from a single
source. She moves around the subject waving the Polaroid
camera, sometimes wildly, as she shoots quite close to the
figure, which results in elaborate distortion. Out of dozens of
Polaroids of a single subject, she selects one or two to be
made into 16 x 16 in. cibachrome prints.
Sometimes, only eyes and mouth are visible, in others, only part
of the head or neck and a fragment of clothing may be
discerned. The images remain identifiable as portraits,
however, because the artist conveys an individual emotional
response to her subject. In some ways, her photographs are
akin to painting, recalling certain works by Frank Auerbach, for
instance. With these expressive images, Pollack pushes
photography away from representation toward the realm of
pure sensation.
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