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galleryIntell videocasts
Video Interviews – galleryIntell
16 episodes
1 month ago
Focused conversations with the experts of the art world, aimed at encouraging art enthusiasts to take a closer look at the art market.
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Visual Arts
Arts
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All content for galleryIntell videocasts is the property of Video Interviews – galleryIntell and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Focused conversations with the experts of the art world, aimed at encouraging art enthusiasts to take a closer look at the art market.
Show more...
Visual Arts
Arts
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VIDEO: Part I. Arne Svenson’s ‘The Workers’ at Julie Saul Gallery
galleryIntell videocasts
4 minutes 6 seconds
10 years ago
VIDEO: Part I. Arne Svenson’s ‘The Workers’ at Julie Saul Gallery
"... one sunny day the light was raking across the windows of the neighbors' and it hit every particle of dirt and dust on the glass, thereby diffusing the scene behind it into, almost, a painterly scene..." — Arne Svenson
Exhibition on view April 9 - May 30th, 2015

Besides never sleeping, New York City also never stops growing and expanding. The familiar orange construction netting, with carefully rounded perforation squares, seems to float through the various neighborhoods of the city, briefly annunciating an impending birth of a new structure. And then it's off to another street, another project, another new beginning. But the army of paint-splattered, dust-covered, helmet-shielded workers behind the magically growing glass and concrete structures often remains unseen. Well, they are, of course, the center of many jokes, complaints, stereotypes and soft-drink commercials, but most of us perceive these builders as one with the structures they build.

Arne Svenson, The Workers 16. Image © Arne Svenson. Courtesy the artist and Julie Saul Gallery

Not so with Arne Svenson, who came to see these men and women in a new light after completing his previous series of photographs 'The Neighbors' — an intimate series of partially obscured portraits of wealthy residents going about their lives in a glass building across from the artist.

The absolute transcending beauty of 'The Workers'  lies in the way Svenson translated the ordinary person inside an ordinary city scene into a jewel-like cameo filled with motion, gesture, light and a mille-feuille of internal narratives. He is, very obviously, not interested in a posed sitter, instead finding beauty in the moments before and after. "I take the photographs and don't look a them for 3-4 days, allowing the excitement of the moment to die down. Then as I examine each one I have to once again "find" that space and moment within the oval." And it is these moments that allow the viewer to construct his/her own dynamic narratives. In fact, the viewer is expected to make as much effort in interacting and establishing a personal bond with the photograph as Svenson made in creating it. And that's fair. "I start the sentence; I give you a paragraph, but you must finish it," says the artist.

On a personal note, I found it interesting that in an earlier interview, Svenson referred to himself as someone who immigrated to NYC from California. A term rarely used when describing movement within he same country, intentional and final as it may be. "I was done with California. I left with no intention of coming back" he clarified when I mentioned the article just before we started taping. And so I find this connection particularly fascinating, since most people who traditionally come to build our cities, and in all probability subjects of his photographs, are themselves immigrants.

For this interview Arne and I met at his exhibition at Julie Saul Gallery in Chelsea and talked about some of the important visual and conceptual aspects of this series, as well as the connections between his portraits and some of the well-known examples from the centuries past. Here is the first part of our interview.
Video interview transcript.
The palette, gestures, composition and of course, the oval that holds your subjects in 'The Workers' all point to the influence of the great European portraiture tradition. Are these references intentional?
Rembrandt van Rijn, Portrait of a Man, 1632, at The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Arne Svenson: Everything from the Baroque, to Renaissance, to Mannerism, to the Edward Hoppers. And I didn’t see it at first because I was looking for something completely different in these images, but as people started telling me this – I started seeing it. So I went to The Met and I looked around and not being a student of art history I don’t have the academic knowledge,
galleryIntell videocasts
Focused conversations with the experts of the art world, aimed at encouraging art enthusiasts to take a closer look at the art market.