-- Advertisement --

                           

-- Advertisement --

Canadian Art

Review

Yedda Morrison: Helping Hand

Republic Gallery, Vancouver May 13 to Jun 19 2010
Yedda Morrison  <em>ReGenesis #14</em>  2010  Courtesy the artist and Republic Gallery Yedda Morrison ReGenesis #14 2010 Courtesy the artist and Republic Gallery

Yedda Morrison <em>ReGenesis #14</em> 2010 Courtesy the artist and Republic Gallery

In her second show at Vancouver’s Republic Gallery, Yedda Morrison presents “ReGenesis,” an exhibition of photographs, taken at close range, of artists painting reproductions of works in the collection of the State Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg. What we actually see is an artist’s hand with brush, working on a detail of a landscape, seascape, portrait or historical scene. But never is the whole painting shown, nor do labels identify them.

Morrison found these images on the website of the copyists who produce these paintings, and acquired the rights to reproduce them for her own purposes. Her previous conceptual photo-based projects, such as Bioposy and Pre-Colonial Forest, raised issues of artificiality, preservation, interpretation, and authenticity. In "ReGenesis" she questions the meaning and relevance of originality in art in today’s world of digital media and the Internet, where copying someone else’s work is easier than ever before.

Her methodology is a continuation of the image scavenging and appropriation art practiced by Sherrie Levine and many other artists in the 1970s and 80s. Levine appropriated Walker Evans’ classic photographs of sharecroppers in the American South by re-photographing the images from a catalogue, questioning their iconic status. Morrison approaches the originality issue from a different perspective. Rather than reproducing a famous artwork herself, she reproduces the work of reproduction artists, adding an additional layer to the levels of replication. In doing so, she raises multiple questions about originality: What is the identity of these original paintings and who are the original artists? What about the identity of the copyists, who do not sign their paintings and remain anonymous? The original paintings were collected by Russian emperors and are housed in a public museum that was the former state residence. Yet the copies being painted, available to anyone who can pay $3800, will be divorced from their origins, hanging in homes and public venues in very different parts of the world. Why have these paintings been selected for reproduction? Are the originals more valuable simply because they were selected to be reproduced? Or are they less valuable now that they have been reproduced?

Morrison further extends the debate about originality, authenticity, and value by re-presenting the photographic images taken by the copyists. Now this documentation has become a new work of art, presented as digital C-prints in two different sizes in editions of five, and available for purchase. Ironically, unlike the original paintings in the Hermitage, which are part of the public domain, Morrison’s photographs are protected by copyright law.

The operative part of Morrison’s title for this series is the prefix “re." If genesis is the act of creating, then in "ReGenesis" these images have been re-photographed, re-produced, and re-presented in order to be re-born. Her images make us re-think the implications of originality.

This article was first published online on July 8, 2010.

RELATED STORIES

  • The Pictures Generation

    In the early 1980s, I framed a photocopy of an art-magazine reproduction of a Sherrie Levine appropriation of a Walker Evans photograph. It seemed a logical conclusion to the appropriation chain, and I can see now how it pointed to the problem with so much of the art made by the Pictures artists: there were simply too many logical conclusions.

  • Jim Breukelman

    Whether it’s topiary, taxidermy or shipbuilding, Jim Breukelman shines a warm, humane light on his photographic subjects.

  • The Most Violent Thing: Idleness as Weapon

    In a culture that values urgency and speed, sometimes doing nothing is the most dramatic thing one can do. The idea is explored in the work of seven artists in “The Most Violent Thing,” a new show at Vancouver’s Republic Gallery.

 

FOUNDATION NEWS

More Foundation news

ONLINE

  • Will Munro: Ecstatic Legacies

    In 2010, at the age of 35, Toronto artist/DJ/promoter/activist Will Munro succumbed to brain cancer. Here, David Balzer reviews the first big survey of Munro’s work, which makes apparent how talented, prolific and perceptive this creator was.

  • Painting Canada: Artistry in the UK

    The Dulwich Picture Gallery’s recent Group of Seven show was one of the UK museum’s biggest hits ever, drawing 41,000 visitors. The attention was deserved, writes Sarah Milroy, as the exhibition offered new insights even to seasoned Canadian-art observers.

  • David Altmejd: In the Belly of the Beast

    The Occupy movement has galvanized the way we think about haves and have-nots. But where do artists fit in? As Joseph R. Wolin observes in this review of David Altmejd’s show at the Brant Foundation, context can be as powerful as content in determining the split.

  • A Stake in the Ground: When Language Wounds

    What happens to identity when our relationship to land and language is disrupted? This is a key question raised in “A Stake in the Ground,” an exhibition of works by 25 First Nations artists, curated by Nadia Myre, that’s currently at Montreal gallery Art Mûr.

  • Canadianartschool.ca: Tips for a Successful Winter Term

    Our education and careers site has just posted more stories and tips to help students achieve a great winter term. Highlights include a profile of internationally renowned fashion designer Jeremy Laing, a Q&A on grad schools and more.

More Online

- Advertisements -



- Advertisements -
Report a problem